Change-Id: Id8543a88929091eb004a5205a30b483253cdaa25
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This removes all explicit ssl->s3->hs access in those files.
Change-Id: I801ca1c894936aecef21e56ec7e7acb9d1b99688
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This takes care of many of the explicit ssl->s3->hs accesses.
Change-Id: I380fae959f3a7021d6de9d19a4ca451b9a0aefe5
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This cuts down on a lot of unchecked ssl->s3->hs accesses. Next is
probably the mass of extensions callbacks, and then we can play
whack-a-mole with git grep.
Change-Id: I81c506ea25c2569a51ceda903853465b8b567b0f
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/12237
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We currently look up SSL_HANDSHAKE off of ssl->s3->hs everywhere, but
this is a little dangerous. Unlike ssl->s3->tmp, ssl->s3->hs may not be
present. Right now we just know not to call some functions outside the
handshake.
Instead, code which expects to only be called during a handshake should
take an explicit SSL_HANDSHAKE * parameter and can assume it non-NULL.
This replaces the SSL * parameter. Instead, that is looked up from
hs->ssl.
Code which is called in both cases, reads from ssl->s3->hs. Ultimately,
we should get to the point that all direct access of ssl->s3->hs needs
to be NULL-checked.
As a start, manage the lifetime of the ssl->s3->hs in SSL_do_handshake.
This allows the top-level handshake_func hooks to be passed in the
SSL_HANDSHAKE *. Later work will route it through the stack. False Start
is a little wonky, but I think this is cleaner overall.
Change-Id: I26dfeb95f1bc5a0a630b5c442c90c26a6b9e2efe
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finishedHash should keep a running secret and incorporate entropy as is
available.
Change-Id: I2d245897e7520b2317bc0051fa4d821c32eeaa10
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Although we ignore all but the first identity, keep clients honest by
parsing the whole thing. Also explicitly check that the binder and
identity counts match.
Change-Id: Ib9c4caae18398360f3b80f8db1b22d4549bd5746
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Due to recent changes, changing the SSL session timeout from cert_cb is
not possible anymore since the new |SSL_SESSION| is initialized *after*
cert_cb is run. The alternative would be using |SSL_CTX_set_timeout| but
the specific |SSL_CTX| could be shared by multiple |SSL|s.
Setting a value on a per-connection basis is useful in case timeouts
need to be calculated dynamically based on specific certificate/domain
information that would be retrieved from inside cert_cb (or other
callbacks).
It would also be possible to set the value to 0 to prevent session
resumption, which is not otherwise doable in the handshake callbacks.
Change-Id: I730a528c647f83f7f77f59b5b21d7e060e4c9843
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BUG=101
Change-Id: Ia1edbccee535b0bc3a0e18465286d5bcca240035
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There is no more derivation step. We just use the resumption secret
directly. This saves us an unnecessary memcpy.
Change-Id: I203bdcc0463780c47cce655046aa1be560bb5b18
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This is fine because TLS PRFs only go up to SHA-384, but since
SSL_SESSION::master_key is sized to 48, not EVP_MAX_MD_SIZE, this should
explicitly check the bounds.
Change-Id: I2b1bcaab5cdfc3ce4d7a8b8ed5cc4c6d15d10270
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Change-Id: I3a5d949eec9241ea43da40ce23e0e7f2a25e30e5
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This aligns with ec_test which has a ForEachCurve helper and avoids
writing these loops all the time. As a bonus, these tests start working
in DTLS now.
Change-Id: I613fc08b641ddc12a819d8a1268a1e6a29043663
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This change causes SSL_CTX_set_signed_cert_timestamp_list to check the
SCT list for shallow validity before allowing it to be set.
Change-Id: Ib8a1fe185224ff02ed4ce53a0109e60d934e96b3
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(Otherwise we end up touching potentially unwound stack.)
I looked into why our builders didn't catch this and it appears that, at
least with Clang 3.7, ASAN doesn't notice this. Perhaps Clang at that
version is being lazy about destructing the scoped CBB and so doesn't
actually go wrong.
Change-Id: Ia0f73e7eb662676439f024805fc8287a4e991ce0
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It is not called outside of t1_enc.c.
Change-Id: Ifd9d109eeb432e931361ebdf456243c490b93ecf
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Since the printed format for errors uses colons to separate different
parts of the error message, this was confusing.
Change-Id: I4742becec2bcb56ad8dc2fdb9a3bb23e4452d1b2
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We do not change ALPN on renego, so the value should carry over and not
be cleared.
Change-Id: Id54a083945542b4457d9c2787f0fe7c30239b76f
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If the function fails, it's an internal_error.
Change-Id: I4b7cf7a6ca2527f04b708303ab1bc71df762b55b
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It doesn't need to be exported out of t1_lib.c.
Change-Id: I000493e1e330457051da1719ca9f8152a4ff845a
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Previously the option to retain only the SHA-256 hash of client
certificates could only be set at the |SSL_CTX| level. This change makes
|SSL| objects inherit the setting from the |SSL_CTX|, but allows it to
be overridden on a per-|SSL| basis.
Change-Id: Id435934af3d425d5f008d2f3b9751d1d0884ee55
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The former has always worked. The latter is new to the revised
processing order.
Change-Id: I993d29ccaca091725524847695df4d1944b609cf
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/11848
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This changes our resumption strategy. Before, we would negotiate ciphers
only on fresh handshakes. On resumption, we would blindly use whatever
was in the session.
Instead, evaluate cipher suite preferences on every handshake.
Resumption requires that the saved cipher suite match the one that would
have been negotiated anyway. If client or server preferences changed
sufficiently, we decline the session.
This is much easier to reason about (we always pick the best cipher
suite), simpler, and avoids getting stuck under old preferences if
tickets are continuously renewed. Notably, although TLS 1.2 ticket
renewal does not work in practice, TLS 1.3 will renew tickets like
there's no tomorrow.
It also means we don't need dedicated code to avoid resuming a cipher
which has since been disabled. (That dedicated code was a little odd
anyway since the mask_k, etc., checks didn't occur. When cert_cb was
skipped on resumption, one could resume without ever configuring a
certificate! So we couldn't know whether to mask off RSA or ECDSA cipher
suites.)
Add tests which assert on this new arrangement.
BUG=116
Change-Id: Id40d851ccd87e06c46c6ec272527fd8ece8abfc6
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This is in preparation for determining the cipher suite (which, in TLS
1.2, requires the certificate be known) before resumption.
Note this has caller-visible effects:
- cert_cb is now called whether resumption occurs or not. Our only
consumer which uses this as a server is Node which will require a
patch to fix up their mucking about with SSL_get_session. (But the
patch should be quite upstreamable. More 1.1.0-compatible and
generally saner.)
- cert_cb is now called before new_session_cb and dos_protection_cb.
BUG=116
Change-Id: I6cc745757f63281fad714d4548f23880570204b0
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This simplifies a little code around EMS and PSK KE modes, but requires
tweaking the SNI code.
The extensions that are more tightly integrated with the handshake are
still processed inline for now. It does, however, require an extra state
in 1.2 so the asynchronous session callback does not cause extensions to
be processed twice. Tweak a test enforce this.
This and a follow-up to move cert_cb before resumption are done in
preparation for resolving the cipher suite before resumption and only
resuming on match.
Note this has caller-visible effects:
- The legacy SNI callback happens before resumption.
- The ALPN callback happens before resumption.
- Custom extension ClientHello parsing callbacks also cannot depend on
resumption state.
- The DoS protection callback now runs after all the extension callbacks
as it is documented to be called after the resumption decision.
BUG=116
Change-Id: I1281a3b61789b95c370314aaed4f04c1babbc65f
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As a client, we must tolerate this to avoid interoperability failures
with allowed server behaviors.
BUG=117
Change-Id: I9c40a2a048282e2e63ab5ee1d40773fc2eda110a
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Draft 18 sadly loosens the requirements to only requiring the PRF hash
stay fixed.
BUG=117
Change-Id: Ic94d53fd9cabaee611fcf36b0071558075e10728
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This is generally much cleaner and makes it possible to implement the
more lax cipher matching in draft 18.
BUG=117
Change-Id: I595d7619d60bc92e598d75b43945286323c0b72b
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This is a no-op because all affected codepaths are either unreachable or
are fine because ssl_hs_error (intentionally, since C doesn't help us
any) aligns with zero. Still, fix these.
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It doesn't particular matter, but AcceptAnySession should only skip the
things that would cause us to note accept a ticket. ExpectTicketAge is
an assertion, not part of protocol logic. Accordingly, fix the text.
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The version check should run if AcceptAnyVersion is *not* set.
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When debugging a flaky test, it's useful to be able to run a given test
over and over.
Change-Id: I1a7b38792215550b242eb8238214d873d41becb6
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The draft 18 implementation did not compute scts_requested correctly. As
a result, it always believed SCTs were requested. Fix this and add tests
for unsolicited OCSP responses and SCTs at all versions.
Thanks to Daniel Hirche for the report.
Change-Id: Ifc59c5c4d7edba5703fa485c6c7a4055b15954b4
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Thanks to Eric Rescorla for catching this.
Change-Id: Id0a024d7f705519cfe76d350e0ef2688dbd11a22
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Having that logic in two different places is a nuisance when we go to
add new checks like resumption stuff. Along the way, this adds missing
tests for the ClientHello cipher/session consistency check. (We'll
eventually get it for free once the cipher/resumption change is
unblocked, but get this working in the meantime.)
This also fixes a bug where the session validity checks happened in the
wrong order relative to whether tickets_supported or renew_ticket was
looked at. Fix that by lifting that logic closer to the handshake.
Change-Id: I3f4b59cfe01064f9125277dc5834e62a36e64aae
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This was removed a while ago. As of -18, the early data indication
extension is just a boolean.
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We missed that the TLS 1.3 code was inconsistent with the TLS 1.2 code.
Only on the server did we push an error code. But consistency between
client and server is probably worthwhile so, fix the 1.2 code to match
for now.
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Change-Id: I0767cd4801924170ce13b8143a9586485b8f78af
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Change-Id: I07c4b67206440d169b314f24e1b3c1c697dda24f
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TLS 1.3 adds a number of places with extensions blocks that don't easily
fit into our ClientHello/EncryptedExtensions callbacks. Between
HelloRetryRequest, ServerHello, draft 18 going nuts with Certificate,
and NewSessionTicket when we do 0-RTT, this passes the "abstract things
that are repeated three times" sniff test.
For now, it rejects unknown extensions, but it will probably grow an
allow_unknown parameter for NewSessionTicket.
This involves disabling some MSVC warnings, but they're invalid as of
C99 which we otherwise require. See
https://connect.microsoft.com/VisualStudio/feedback/details/1230248/remove-c99-related-warnings-or-make-them-off-by-default
Change-Id: Iea8bf8ab216270c081dd63e79aaad9ec73b3b550
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BUG=112
Change-Id: I88ef17e32e33b091ff1e27b7950f88e1d48f9278
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For TLS 1.3 draft 18, it will be useful to get at the full current
message and not just the body. Add a hook to expose it and replace
hash_current_message with a wrapper over it.
BUG=112
Change-Id: Ib9e00dd1b78e8b72e12409d85c80e96c5b411a8b
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Certificate chain with intermediate taken from Chromium's tests. Though
it doesn't really matter because the runner tests don't verify
certificates.
BUG=70
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We used to enforce after the version was set, but stopped enforcing with
TLS 1.3. NSS enforces the value for encrypted records, which makes sense
and avoids the problems gating it on have_version. Add tests for this.
Change-Id: I7fb5f94ab4a22e8e3b1c14205aa934952d671727
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It's all of one bit, but having it on the SSL object means we need
manually to reset it on renego.
Change-Id: I989dacd430fe0fa63d76451b95f036a942aefcfe
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dtls1_finish_message should NULL *out_msg before calling OPENSSL_free,
rather than asking ssl3_complete_message to do it. ssl3_finish_message
has no need to call it at all.
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This is to allow for PSK binders to be munged into the ClientHello as part of
draft 18.
BUG=112
Change-Id: Ic4fd3b70fa45669389b6aaf55e61d5839f296748
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/12228
Reviewed-by: David Benjamin <davidben@google.com>
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We have AEAD-level coverage for these, but we should also test this in
the TLS stack, and at maximum size per upstream's CVE-2016-7054.
Change-Id: I1f4ad0356e793d6a3eefdc2d55a9c7e05ea08261
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/12187
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This change renames |peer| to |x509_peer| and |cert_chain| to
|x509_chain| in |SSL_SESSION|. It also renames |x509| to |x509_leaf| and
|chain| to |x509_chain| in |CERT|. (All with an eye to maybe making
them lazily initialised in the future).
This a) catches anyone who might be accessing these members directly and
b) makes space for |CRYPTO_BUFFER|-based values to take the unprefixed
names.
Change-Id: I10573304fb7d6f1ea03f9e645f7fc0acdaf71ac2
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/12162
Reviewed-by: David Benjamin <davidben@google.com>
In transition to removing it altogether, set SSL_MODE_NO_AUTO_CHAIN by
default. If we find some consumer was relying on it, this will allow
them to revert locally with SSL_(CTX_)clear_mode, but hopefully this was
just unused.
BUG=42
Change-Id: Iaf70a436a3324ce02e02dfb18213b6715c034ff2
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/12180
Commit-Queue: David Benjamin <davidben@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Adam Langley <agl@google.com>
3c6a1ea674 switched what layer handled
the DTLS version mapping but forgot to correct the HelloVerifyRequest
logic to account for this.
Thanks to Jed Davis for noticing this.
Change-Id: I94ea18fc43a7ba15dd7250bfbcf44dbb3361b3ce
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/11984
Reviewed-by: David Benjamin <davidben@google.com>
This is already manually released at the end of the handshake. With this
change, it can happen implicitly, and SSL3_STATE shrinks further by
another pointer.
Change-Id: I94b9f2e4df55e8f2aa0b3a8799baa3b9a34d7ac1
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/12121
Reviewed-by: Adam Langley <agl@google.com>
Fuzzer mode explores the handshake, but at the cost of losing coverage
on the record layer. Add a separate build flag and client/server
corpora for this mode.
Note this requires tweaks in consumers' fuzzer build definitions.
BUG=111
Change-Id: I1026dc7301645e165a761068a1daad6eedc9271e
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/12108
Commit-Queue: David Benjamin <davidben@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Adam Langley <agl@google.com>
The distinction for full handshakes is not meaningful (the timestamp is
currently the start of the handshake), but for renewed sessions, we
currently retain the timestamp of the original issuance.
Instead, when minting or receiving tickets, adjust session->time and
session->timeout so that session->time is the ticket issuance time.
This is still not our final TLS 1.3 behavior (which will need a both
renewable and non-renewable times to honor the server ticket lifetime),
but it gets us closer and unblocks handling ticket_age_add from TLS 1.3
draft 18 and sends the correct NewSessionTicket lifetime.
This fixes the ticket lifetime hint which we emit on the server to
mirror the true ticket lifetime. It also fixes the TLS 1.3 server code
to not set the ticket lifetime hint. There is no need to waste ticket
size with it, it is no longer a "hint" in TLS 1.3, and even in the TLS
1.3 code we didn't fill it in on the server.
Change-Id: I140541f1005a24e53e1b1eaa90996d6dada1c3a1
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/12105
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If there is a malloc failure while assembling the ticket, call
CBB_cleanup. Also return -1 instead of 0; zero means EOF in the old
state machine and -1 means error. (Except enough of the stack gets it
wrong that consumers handle both, but we should fix this.)
Change-Id: I98541a9fa12772ec159f9992d1f9f53e5ca4cc5a
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/12104
Commit-Queue: David Benjamin <davidben@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Adam Langley <agl@google.com>
There's no sense in flushing twice in one flight. This means when
writing a message is finally synchronous, we don't need the intermediate
state at all.
Change-Id: Iaca60d64917f82dce0456a8b15de4ee00f2d557b
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/12103
Commit-Queue: David Benjamin <davidben@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Adam Langley <agl@google.com>
TLS 1.3 clarifies that a ticket lifetime of zero means the session is
unusable. We don't currently pay attention to that field (to be fixed in
later changes) but, in preparation for this, switch the >= to a >.
Change-Id: I0e67a0d97bc8def04914f121e84d3e7a2d640d2c
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/12102
Commit-Queue: David Benjamin <davidben@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Adam Langley <agl@google.com>
These don't make sense and mean some SSL_SESSIONs serialize and
deserialize as different values. If we ever managed to create an
SSL_SESSION without a time, it would never expire because time always
gets set to time(NULL). If we ever created an SSL_SESSION with a zero
timeout, the timeout would be... three? Once we start adjusting
time/timeout to issuance time, driving timeout to zero is actually
plausible, so it should work properly.
Instead, make neither field optional. We always fill both out, so this
shouldn't have any effects. If it does, the only effect would be to
decline to resume some existing tickets which must have been so old that
we'd want them to have expired anyway.
Change-Id: Iee3620658c467dd6d96a2b695fec831721b03b5b
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/12101
Commit-Queue: David Benjamin <davidben@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Adam Langley <agl@google.com>
The values are long, so check for negative numbers.
Change-Id: I8fc7333edbed50dc058547a4b53bc10b234071b4
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/12100
Commit-Queue: David Benjamin <davidben@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Adam Langley <agl@google.com>
This business with |ok| is unnecessary. This function is still rather a
mess, but this is a small improvement.
Change-Id: I28fdf1a3687fe6a9d58d81a22cf2f8e7ce5b9b2c
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A renewed session does not refresh the timeout. Add tests for this in
preparation for future changes which will revise this logic.
Specifically, TLS 1.3 draft 18's ticket_age_add logic will require some
tweaks in lifetime tracking to record when the ticket was minted. We'll
also likely wish to tweak the parameters for 1.3 to account for (a)
ECDHE-PSK means we're only worried about expiring a short-circuited
authentication rather than forward secrecy and (b) two hours is too
short for a QUIC 0-RTT replacement.
Change-Id: I0f1edd09151e7fcb5aee2742ef8600fbd7080df6
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/12002
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This is only used in one place where we don't take advantage of it being
sorted anyway.
Change-Id: If6f0d04e975db903e8a93c57c869ea4964c0be37
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/12062
Commit-Queue: David Benjamin <davidben@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Adam Langley <agl@google.com>
This is the last blocker within BoringSSL itself to opaquifying SSL.
(There are still blockers in consumers, of course.)
BUG=6
Change-Id: Ie3b8dcb78eeaa9aea7311406c5431a8625d60401
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/12061
Reviewed-by: Adam Langley <agl@google.com>
TLS 1.3 ciphers are now always enabled and come with a hard-coded
preference order.
BUG=110
Change-Id: Idd9cb0d75fb6bf2676ecdee27d88893ff974c4a3
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/12025
Reviewed-by: Adam Langley <agl@google.com>
HTTP/2 requires TLS 1.2 so the negotiated version should be available
during the ALPN callback.
Change-Id: Iea332808b531a6e5c917de5b8c8917c0aa7428a1
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They will get very confused about which key they're using. Any caller
using exporters must either (a) leave renegotiation off or (b) be very
aware of when renegotiations happen anyway. (You need to somehow
coordinate with the peer about which epoch's exporter to use.)
Change-Id: I921ad01ac9bdc88f3fd0f8283757ce673a47ec75
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/12003
Reviewed-by: Adam Langley <agl@google.com>
The existing tests for this codepath require us to reconfigure the shim.
This will not work when TLS 1.3 cipher configuration is detached from
the old cipher language. It also doesn't hit codepaths like sessions
containing a TLS 1.3 version but TLS 1.2 cipher.
Instead, add some logic to the runner to rewrite tickets and build tests
out of that.
Change-Id: I57ac5d49c3069497ed9aaf430afc65c631014bf6
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/12024
Reviewed-by: Adam Langley <agl@google.com>
It is not ignored.
Change-Id: I2e607a6d6f7444838fc6fa65cd18e9aa142f139f
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/12023
Commit-Queue: David Benjamin <davidben@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Adam Langley <agl@google.com>
HTTP/2 places requirements on the cipher suite. So that servers can
decline HTTP/2 when these requirements aren't met, defer ALPN
negotiation.
See also b/32553041.
Change-Id: Idbcf049f9c8bda06a8be52a0154fe76e84607268
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/11982
Reviewed-by: Adam Langley <agl@google.com>
We were only testing one side.
Change-Id: Ieb755e27b235aaf1317bd2c8e5fb374cb0ecfdb3
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/12001
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Trim a few more bytes from the future QUIC ClientHello.
Change-Id: If23c5cd078889a9a26cf2231b51b17c2615a38ea
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/12000
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Get some of the duplicate logic out of the way.
Change-Id: Iee7c64577e14d1ddfead7e1e32c42c5c9f2a310d
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/11981
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TLS 1.3 also uses this extension and doesn't use any EC-based suites.
Always offering the extension is simpler. Also this gets an
SSL_get_ciphers call out of the way (that function is somewhat messy in
semantics).
Change-Id: I2091cb1046e0aea85caa76e73f50e8416e6ed94c
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This change is based on interpreting TLS 1.3 draft 18.
Change-Id: I727961aff2f7318bcbbc8bf6d62b7d6ad3e62da9
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/11921
Reviewed-by: David Benjamin <davidben@google.com>
This should never happen, but the SSL_AEAD_CTX_new layer should enforce
key sizes as it's not locally obvious at the call site the caller didn't
get confused. There's still a mess of asserts below, but those should be
fixed by cutting the SSL_CIPHER/SSL_AEAD_CTX boundary differently.
(enc_key_len is validated by virtue of being passed into EVP_AEAD.)
BUG=chromium:659593
Change-Id: I8c91609bcef14ca1509c87aab981bbad6556975f
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/11940
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These were forward-declared for SSL3_STATE but with that hidden, it's no
longer necessary.
Change-Id: I8c548822f56f6172b4033b2fa89c038adcec2caa
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/11860
Reviewed-by: Adam Langley <agl@google.com>
Later work is going to cause some turbulence here.
Change-Id: Iba98bcf56e81492ec0dca54a381b38d1c115247a
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/11843
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This is still rather a mess with how it's tied to SSL_AEAD_CTX_new
(probably these should get encapsulated in an SSL_AEAD struct), but this
avoids running the TLS 1.3 nonce logic on fake AEADs. This is impossible
based on cipher version checks, but we shouldn't need to rely on it.
It's also a little tidier since out_mac_secret_len is purely a function
of algorithm_mac.
BUG=chromium:659593
Change-Id: Icc24d43c54a582bcd189d55958e2d232ca2db4dd
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/11842
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This shouldn't happen, but it is good to check to avoid the potential
underflow in ssl_session_is_time_valid.
This required tweaking the mock clock in bssl_shim to stop going back in
time.
Change-Id: Id3ab8755139e989190d0b53d4bf90fe1ac203022
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/11841
Reviewed-by: David Benjamin <davidben@google.com>
BUG=chromium:659593
Change-Id: I73a4751609b85df7cd40f0f60dc3f3046a490940
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/11861
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We currently preferentially sign the largest hash available and
advertise such a preference for signatures we accept. We're just as
happy with SHA-256 and, all else equal, a smaller hash would be epsilon
more performant. We also currently claim, in TLS 1.3, we prefer P-384
over P-256 which is off.
Instead order SHA-256 first, next the larger SHA-2 hashes, and leave
SHA-1 at the bottom. Within a hash, order ECDSA > RSA-PSS > RSA-PKCS1.
This has the added consequence that we will preferentially pair P-256
with SHA-256 in signatures we generate instead of larger hashes that get
truncated anyway.
Change-Id: If4aee068ba6829e8c0ef7948f56e67a5213e4c50
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/11821
Reviewed-by: Adam Langley <agl@google.com>
SSL_write has messy semantics around retries. As a sanity-check, it does
pointer and length checks and requires the original and retry SSL_write
pass the same buffer pointer.
In some cases, buffer addresses may change but still include the
original data as a prefix on the retry. Callers then set
SSL_MODE_ACCEPT_MOVING_WRITE_BUFFER to skip the pointer check. But, in
that case, the pointer may have been freed so doing a comparison is
undefined behavior.
Short-circuiting the pointer equality check avoids this problem.
Change-Id: I76cb8f7d45533504cd95287bc53897ca636af51d
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On the client we'll leave it off by default until the change has made it
through Chrome's release process. For TLS 1.3, there is no existing
breakage risk, so always do it. This saves us the trouble of having to
manually turn it on in servers.
See [0] for a data point of someone getting it wrong.
[0] https://hg.mozilla.org/projects/nss/rev/9dbc21b1c3cc
Change-Id: I74daad9e7efd2040e9d66d72d558b31f145e6c4c
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/11680
Reviewed-by: Adam Langley <agl@google.com>
Change-Id: I18cee423675d6a686f83b4ef4b38696cb618392c
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/11683
Commit-Queue: David Benjamin <davidben@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Nick Harper <nharper@chromium.org>
Reviewed-by: David Benjamin <davidben@google.com>
Change-Id: I0bd7fdd276e7461ef08b8055bf3d0387f756739f
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/11682
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BUG=103
Change-Id: I9a49fbaf66af73978ce264d27926f483e1e44766
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/11620
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Channel ID for TLS 1.3 uses the same digest construction as
CertificateVerify. This message is signed with the Channel ID key and
put in the same handshake message (with the same format) as in TLS 1.2.
BUG=103
Change-Id: Ia5b2dffe5a39c39db0cecb0aa6bdc328e53accc2
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/11420
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{sha1, ecdsa} is virtually nonexistent. {sha512, ecdsa} is pointless
when we only accept P-256 and P-384. See Chromium Intent thread here:
https://groups.google.com/a/chromium.org/d/msg/blink-dev/kWwLfeIQIBM/9chGZ40TCQAJ
This tweaks the signature algorithm logic slightly so that sign and
verify preferences are separate.
BUG=chromium:655318
Change-Id: I1097332600dcaa38e62e4dffa0194fb734c6df3f
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/11621
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If SSL_CTX_set_signing_algorithm_prefs or
SSL_set_signing_algorithm_prefs are
called multiple times for the same cert, the
previous cert->sigalgs will leak.
Free the existing sigalgs before setting a new one.
Change-Id: I73cdb366a8f47d8cc0baae986fd0aa80b60300e2
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BUG=6
Change-Id: I463f5daa0bbf0f65269c52da25fa235ee2aa6ffb
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/11240
Commit-Queue: David Benjamin <davidben@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Adam Langley <agl@google.com>
There were some logic errors that were revealed by testing at TLS 1.3.
Also explicitly test GetClientHelloLen at TLS 1.2 (rather than relying
on the default) since the TLS 1.3 ClientHello is too large.
Change-Id: I907cb6ac04b40f845e99593bad06739132ca56b2
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/11605
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Some new tests needed to be suppressed.
Change-Id: I4474d752c338a18440efb213e0795ae81ad754fb
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/11583
Reviewed-by: Steven Valdez <svaldez@google.com>
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This should land in the same group of revisions as the two parent
commits.
Change-Id: Id9d769b890b3308ea70b705e7241c73cb1930ede
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Commit-Queue: David Benjamin <davidben@google.com>
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Reviewed-by: David Benjamin <davidben@google.com>
We'll never send cookies, but we'll echo them on request. Implement it
in runner as well and test.
BUG=98
Change-Id: Idd3799f1eaccd52ac42f5e2e5ae07c209318c270
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/11565
Commit-Queue: David Benjamin <davidben@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Steven Valdez <svaldez@google.com>
Reviewed-by: David Benjamin <davidben@google.com>
This doesn't currently honor the required KeyUpdate response. That will
be done in a follow-up.
BUG=74
Change-Id: I750fc41278736cb24230303815e839c6f6967b6a
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/11412
Commit-Queue: David Benjamin <davidben@google.com>
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These too must be rejected. Test both unknown extensions and extensions
in the wrong context.
Change-Id: I54d5a5060f9efc26e5e4d23a0bde3c0d4d302d09
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This clears the last of Android's build warnings from BoringSSL. These
pragmas aren't actually no-ops, but it just means that MinGW consumers
(i.e. just Android) need to explicitly list the dependency (which they
do).
There may be something to be said for removing those and having everyone
list dependencies, but I don't really want to chase down every
consumer's build files. Probably not worth the trouble.
Change-Id: I8fcff954a6d5de9471f456db15c54a1b17cb937a
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/11573
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This was a remnant of the old cipher suite setup.
Change-Id: Ibc79b81200a52d45fbd69b9c04060c38ad4707f5
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/11564
Reviewed-by: David Benjamin <davidben@google.com>
This is part of TLS 1.3 draft 16 but isn't much of a wire format change,
so go ahead and add it now. When rolling into Chromium, we'll want to
add an entry to the error mapping.
Change-Id: I8fd7f461dca83b725a31ae19ef96c890d603ce53
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/11563
Reviewed-by: David Benjamin <davidben@google.com>
We only save them at TLS 1.0 through 1.2. This saves 104 bytes of
per-connection memory.
Change-Id: If397bdc10e40f0194cba01024e0e9857d6b812f0
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/11571
Reviewed-by: Adam Langley <agl@google.com>
We need to retain a pair of Finished messages for renegotiation_info.
SSL 3.0's is actually larger than TLS 1.2's (always 12 bytes). Take
renegotiation out in preparation for trimming them to size.
Change-Id: I2e238c48aaf9be07dd696bc2a6af75e9b0ead299
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/11570
Reviewed-by: Adam Langley <agl@google.com>
We only need one copy, not two. This trims 130 bytes of per-connection
memory.
Change-Id: I334aa7b1f8608e72426986bfa68534d416f3bda9
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/11569
Reviewed-by: Adam Langley <agl@google.com>
tls-unique isn't defined at TLS 1.3 yet. (Given that it was too small in
1.2, they may just define a new one entirely?) SSL_get_(peer_)finished
doesn't work at 1.3 and is only used in lieu of computing tls-unique,
also undefined at SSL 3.0.
This is in preparation for trimming the copies of the Finished messages
we retain.
Change-Id: Iace99f2baea92c511c4041c592300dfbbe7226e2
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/11568
Reviewed-by: Adam Langley <agl@google.com>
SSL_HANDSHAKE is dropped after the handshake, so I've removed the logic
around smaller sizes. It's much simpler when we can use CBS_stow and
CBB_finish without extra bounds-checking.
Change-Id: Idafaa5d69e171aed9a8759f3d44e52cb01c40f39
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/11567
Reviewed-by: Adam Langley <agl@google.com>
Now not only the pointers but also the list itself is released after the
handshake completes.
Change-Id: I8b568147d2d4949b3b0efe58a93905f77a5a4481
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/11528
Reviewed-by: Adam Langley <agl@google.com>
It's weird and makes things more confusing. Only use it for local
preferences as there is a default. Peer preferences can be read
directly. Also simplify the logic for requiring a non-empty peer group
list for ECDHE. The normal logic will give us this for free.
Change-Id: I1916155fe246be988f20cbf0b1728380ec90ff3d
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/11527
Reviewed-by: Adam Langley <agl@google.com>
This function is now only ever called as a client, so there are no peer
preferences to check against. It is also now only called on peer curves,
so it only needs to be compared against local preferences.
Change-Id: I87f5b10cf4fe5fef9a9d60aff36010634192e90c
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/11526
Reviewed-by: Adam Langley <agl@google.com>
These functions are only called once. It ends up being not much code if
just done inline.
Change-Id: Ic432b313a6f7994ff9f51436cffbe0c3686a6c7c
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/11525
Reviewed-by: Adam Langley <agl@google.com>
This is in preparation for simplifying tls1_check_group_id, called by
tls1_check_ec_cert, which, in turn, is in preparation for moving the
peer group list to SSL_HANDSHAKE.
It also helps with bug #55. Move the key usage check to the certificate
configuration sanity check. There's no sense in doing it late. Also
remove the ECDSA peer curve check as we configure certificates
externally. With only one certificate, there's no sense in trying to
remove it.
BUG=55
Change-Id: I8c116337770d96cc9cfd4b4f0ca7939a4f05a1a9
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/11524
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This releases memory associated with them after the handshake. Note this
changes the behavior of |SSL_get0_certificate_types| and
|SSL_get_client_CA_list| slightly. Both functions now return NULL
outside of the handshake. But they were already documented to return
something undefined when not called at the CertificateRequest.
A survey of callers finds none that would care. (Note
SSL_get_client_CA_list is used both as a getter for the corresponding
server config setter and to report client handshake properties. Only the
latter is affected.) It's also pretty difficult to imagine why a caller
would wish to query this stuff at any other time, and there are clear
benefits to dropping the CA list after the handshake (some servers send
ABSURDLY large lists).
Change-Id: I3ac3b601ff0cfa601881ce77ae33d99bb5327004
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/11521
Reviewed-by: Adam Langley <agl@google.com>
Change-Id: Ifcdbeab9291d1141605a09a1960702c792cffa86
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/11561
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Change-Id: I5d4fc0d3204744e93d71a36923469035c19a5b10
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Change-Id: Ib499b3393962a4d41cf9694e055ed3eb869d91a2
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/11504
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The server acknowledging a non-existent session is a particularly
interesting case since getting it wrong means a NULL crash.
Change-Id: Iabde4955de883595239cfd8e9d84a7711e60a886
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/11500
Reviewed-by: Steven Valdez <svaldez@google.com>
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BUG=77
Change-Id: If568412655aae240b072c29d763a5b17bb5ca3f7
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/10840
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BUG=77
Change-Id: Id8c45e98c4c22cdd437cbba1e9375239e123b261
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EnableAllCiphers is problematic since some (version, cipher)
combinations aren't even defined and crash. Instead, use the
SendCipherSuite bug to mask the true cipher (which is becomes arbitrary)
for failure tests. The shim should fail long before we get further.
This lets us remove a number of weird checks in the TLS 1.3 code.
This also fixes the UnknownCipher tests which weren't actually testing
anything. EnableAllCiphers is now AdvertiseAllConfiguredCiphers and
does not filter out garbage values.
Change-Id: I7102fa893146bb0d096739e768c5a7aa339e51a8
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/11481
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This is another case where the specification failed to hammer things
down and OpenSSL messed it up as a result. Also fix the SCT test in TLS
1.3.
Change-Id: I47541670447d1929869e1a39b2d9671a127bfba0
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/11480
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The client/server split didn't actually make sense. We're interested in
whether the client will notice the bad version before anything else, so
ignore peer cipher preferences so all combinations work.
Change-Id: I52f84b932509136a9b39d93e46c46729c3864bfd
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/11413
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cURL calls this function if |OPENSSL_VERSION_NUMBER| is in [0x10002003,
0x10002fff], which it now is for BoringSSL after 0aecbcf6.
Change-Id: I3f224f73f46791bd2232a1a96ed926c32740a6f6
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/11461
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Commit-Queue: David Benjamin <davidben@google.com>
ConflictingVersionNegotiation really should be about, say 1.1 and 1.2
since those may be negotiated via either mechanism. (Those two cases are
actually kinda weird and we may wish to change the spec. But, in the
meantime, test that we have the expected semantics.)
Also test that we ignore true TLS 1.3's number for now, until we use it,
and that TLS 1.3 suitably ignores ClientHello.version.
Change-Id: I76c660ddd179313fa68b15a6fda7a698bef4d9c9
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/11407
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They weren't updated for the new version negotiation. (Though right now
they're just testing that we *don't* implement the downgrade detection
because it's a draft version.)
Change-Id: I4c983ebcdf3180d682833caf1e0063467ea41544
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/11406
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Otherwise we panic. Thanks to EKR for reporting.
Change-Id: Ie4b6c2e18e1c77c7b660ca5d4c3bafb38a82cb6a
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/11405
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Rather than clear variables and break out of a loop that just ends up
returning anyway, just return. This makes all the abort points
consistent in this function.
Change-Id: I51d862e7c60a9e967773f15a17480b783af8c456
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Breaking from inside the inner loop doesn't do what the code wants.
Instead the outer loop will continue running and it's possible for it to
read off the end of the buffer. (Found with libFuzzer.)
Next change will update the other abort points in this code to match.
Change-Id: I006dca0cd4c31db1c4b5e84b996fe24b2f1e6c13
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I always forget this.
Change-Id: I9fa15cebb6586985ddc48cdbf9d184a49a8bfb02
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/11402
Commit-Queue: David Benjamin <davidben@google.com>
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This function is used by NGINX to enable specific curves for ECDH from a
configuration file. However when building with BoringSSL, since it's not
implmeneted, it falls back to using EC_KEY_new_by_curve_name() wich doesn't
support X25519.
Change-Id: I533df4ef302592c1a9f9fc8880bd85f796ce0ef3
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OpenSSL recently had a regression here (CVE-2016-6309). We're fine,
but so that we stay that way, add some tests.
Change-Id: I244d7ff327b7aad550f86408c5e5e65e6d1babe5
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/11321
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BUG=106
Change-Id: Iaa12aeb67627f3c22fe4a917c89c646cb3dc1843
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/11325
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Change-Id: I73f9fd64b46f26978b897409d817b34ec9d93afd
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We were never really testing this.
Change-Id: Ia953870053d16d3994ae48172017d384c7bc3601
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/11341
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This mirror's 2dc0204603 on the C side.
BUG=90
Change-Id: Iebb72df5a5ae98cb2fd8db519d973cd734ff05ea
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This is in preparation for implementing the version extension and is
probably what we should have done from the beginning as it makes
intolerance bugs simpler.
This means knobs like SendClientVersion and SendServerVersion deal with
the wire values while knobs like NegotiateVersion and MaxVersion deal
with logical versions. (This matches how the bugs have always worked.
SendFoo is just a weird post-processing bit on the handshake messages
while NegotiateVersion actually changes how BoGo behaves.)
BUG=90
Change-Id: I7f359d798d0899fa2742107fb3d854be19e731a4
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/11300
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It didn't clean up |profiles| on error or check for
sk_SRTP_PROTECTION_PROFILE_push failures.
Change-Id: I44d7f64896ad73347fbb0fc79752be4de70d3ab7
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/11323
Commit-Queue: David Benjamin <davidben@google.com>
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Also tidy up the logic slightly.
Change-Id: I708254406b2df52435ec434ac9806e8eb2cbe928
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/11322
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If someone is still using EVP_PKEY_EC (I really should get on converting
Chromium...), don't silently skip the curve match check in TLS 1.3,
otherwise it may work on accident. Refuse to sign anything so this gets
caught.
Change-Id: I4ea46efb0b8f31a656771b9d2e5f882bba64eb99
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This GREASEs cipher suites, groups, and extensions. For now, we'll
always place them in a hard-coded position. We can experiment with more
interesting strategies later.
If we add new ciphers and curves, presumably we prefer them over current
ones, so place GREASE values at the front. This prevents implementations
from parsing only the first value and ignoring the rest.
Add two new extensions, one empty and one non-empty. Place the empty one
in front (IBM WebSphere can't handle trailing empty extensions) and the
non-empty one at the end.
Change-Id: If2e009936bc298cedf2a7a593ce7d5d5ddbb841a
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Get us a little bit more room here.
BUG=79
Change-Id: Ifadad94ead7794755a33f02d340111694b3572af
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That is an extremely confusing name. It should be NPN-Declined-TLS13.
Change-Id: I0e5fa50a3ddb0b80e88a8bc10d0ef87d0fff0a54
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We recently added a three-connection option, but the transcripts were
still assuming just -Normal and -Resume.
Change-Id: I8816bce95dd7fac779af658e3eb86bc78bb95c91
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This allows the fuzzer to discover server-side resumption paths by
simply supplying what we'd like the ticket to decrypt to in the clear.
We also have a natural way to get transcripts out of runner. We record
the runner-side transcripts, so all resumption handshakes will replay
the shim-created unencrypted tickets.
BUG=104
Change-Id: Icf9cbf4af520077d38e2c8c2766b6f8bfa3c9ab5
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Both the C and Go code were sampling the real clock. With this, two
successive iterations of runner transcripts give the same output.
Change-Id: I4d9e219e863881bf518c5ac199dce938a49cdfaa
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We want to ensure -fuzzer passes tests, except for the tests it
intentionally fails on. This ensures that we don't lose our ability to
refresh the fuzzer transcripts.
Change-Id: I761856c30379a3934fd46a24627ef8415b136f93
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Apparently we never wrote one of those. Also send a decrypt_error alert
to be consistent with all the other signature checks.
Change-Id: Ib5624d098d1e3086245192cdce92f5df26005064
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/11180
Reviewed-by: David Benjamin <davidben@google.com>
SSL_peek works fine for us, but OpenSSL 1.1.0 regressed this
(https://github.com/openssl/openssl/issues/1563), and we don't have
tests either. Fix this.
SSL_peek can handle all weird events that SSL_read can, so use runner
and tell bssl_shim to do a SSL_peek + SSL_peek + SSL_read instead of
SSL_read. Then add tests for all the events we may discover.
Change-Id: I9e8635e3ca19653a02a883f220ab1332d4412f98
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Upstream makes 0 mean "min/max supported version". Match that behavior,
although call it "default" instead. It shouldn't get you TLS 1.3 until
we're ready to turn it on everywhere.
BUG=90
Change-Id: I9f122fceb701b7d4de2ff70afbc1ffdf370cb97e
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We'd previously been assuming we'd want to predict P-256 and X25519 but,
on reflection, that's nonsense. Although, today, P-256 is widespread and
X25519 is less so, that's not the right question to ask. Those servers
are all 1.2.
The right question is whether we believe enough servers will get to TLS
1.3 before X25519 to justify wasting 64 bytes on all other connections.
Given that OpenSSL has already shipped X25519 and Microsoft was doing
interop testing on X25519 around when we were shipping it, I think the
answer is no.
Moreover, if we are wrong, it will be easier to go from predicting one
group to two rather than the inverse (provided we send a fake one with
GREASE). I anticipate prediction-miss HelloRetryRequest logic across the
TLS/TCP ecosystem will be largely untested (no one wants to pay an RTT),
so taking a group out of the predicted set will likely be a risky
operation.
Only predicting one group also makes things a bit simpler. I haven't
done this here, but we'll be able to fold the 1.2 and 1.3 ecdh_ctx's
together, even.
Change-Id: Ie7e42d3105aca48eb9d97e2e05a16c5379aa66a3
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The old numbers violate a MUST-level requirement in TLS 1.2 to not
advertise anonymous (0x0700 ends in 0x00). The spec has been updated
with new allocations which avoid these.
BUG=webrtc:6342
Change-Id: Ia5663ada98fa1ebf0f8a7f50fe74a0e9206c4194
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/11131
Reviewed-by: Adam Langley <agl@google.com>
Found by libFuzzer and then one more mistake caught by valgrind. Add a
test for this case.
Change-Id: I92773bc1231bafe5fc069e8568d93ac0df4c8acb
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/11129
Reviewed-by: David Benjamin <davidben@google.com>
Upstream added these functions after we did but decided to change the
names slightly. I'm not sure why they wanted to add the "proto" in
there, but align with them nonetheless so the ecosystem only has one set
of these functions.
BUG=90
Change-Id: Ia9863c58c9734374092051f02952b112806040cc
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/11123
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This is in preparation for using the supported_versions extension to
experiment with draft TLS 1.3 versions, since we don't wish to restore
the fallback. With versions begin opaque values, we will want
version_from_wire to reject unknown values, not attempt to preserve
order in some way.
This means ClientHello.version processing needs to be separate code.
That's just written out fully in negotiate_version now. It also means
SSL_set_{min,max}_version will notice invalid inputs which aligns us
better with upstream's versions of those APIs.
This CL doesn't replace ssl->version with an internal-representation
version, though follow work should do it once a couple of changes land
in consumers.
BUG=90
Change-Id: Id2f5e1fa72847c823ee7f082e9e69f55e51ce9da
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This will make it a little easier to store the normalized version rather
than the wire version. Also document the V2ClientHello behavior.
Change-Id: I5ce9ccce44ca48be2e60ddf293c0fab6bba1356e
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/11121
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Passing --quiet makes valgrind only print out errors, so we don't need
to suppress things. Combine that with checking valgrind's dedicated exit
code so we notice errors that happen before the "---DONE---" marker.
This makes that marker unnecessary for valgrind. all_tests.go was not
sensitive to this, but still would do well to have valgrind be silent.
Change-Id: I841edf7de87081137e38990e647e989fd7567295
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/11128
Reviewed-by: Adam Langley <agl@google.com>
If the test failed due to non-ASan reasons but ASan also had errors,
output those too.
Change-Id: Id908fe2a823c59255c6a9585dfaa894a4fcd9f59
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/11127
Reviewed-by: Adam Langley <agl@google.com>
Runner needs to implement fuzzer mode as well so we can record
transcripts from it. A bunch of tests were failing:
- C and Go disagreed on what fuzzer mode did to TLS 1.3 padding. So we
fuzz more code, align Go with C. Fuzzer mode TLS 1.3 still pads but
just skips the final AEAD.
- The deterministic RNG should be applied per test, not per exchange. It
turns out, if your RNG is deterministic, one tends to pick the same
session ID over and over which confuses clients. (Resumption is
signaled by echoing the session ID.)
Now the only failing tests are the ones one would expect to fail.
BUG=79
Change-Id: Ica23881a6e726adae71e6767730519214ebcd62a
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If we see garbage in ClientHello.version and then select static RSA,
that garbage is what goes in the premaster.
Change-Id: I65190a44439745e6b5ffaf7669f063da725c8097
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Plain PSK omits the ServerKeyExchange when there is no hint and includes
it otherwise (it should have always sent it), while other PSK ciphers
like ECDHE_PSK cannot omit the hint. Having different capabilities here
is odd and RFC 4279 5.2 suggests that all PSK ciphers are capable of
"[not] provid[ing] an identity hint".
Interpret this to mean no identity hint and empty identity hint are the
same state. Annoyingly, this gives a plain PSK implementation two
options for spelling an empty hint. The spec isn't clear and this is not
really a battle worth fighting, so I've left both acceptable and added a
test for this case.
See also https://android-review.googlesource.com/c/275217/. This is also
consistent with Android's PskKeyManager API, our only consumer anyway.
https://developer.android.com/reference/android/net/PskKeyManager.html
Change-Id: I8a8e6cc1f7dd1b8b202cdaf3d4f151bebfb4a25b
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One less field to reset on renego and save a pointer of post-handshake
memory.
Change-Id: Ifc0c3c73072af244ee3848d9a798988d2c8a7c38
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/11086
Reviewed-by: Adam Langley <agl@google.com>
This isn't hugely important since the hs object will actually be
released at the end of the handshake, but no sense in holding on to them
longer than needed.
Also release |public_key| when we no longer need it and document what
the fields mean.
Change-Id: If677cb4a915c75405dabe7135205630527afd8bc
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/10360
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access_denied is only used to indicate client cert errors and Chrome
maps it to ERR_SSL_BAD_CLIENT_AUTH_CERT accordingly:
access_denied
A valid certificate was received, but when access control was
applied, the sender decided not to proceed with negotiation. This
message is always fatal.
We don't appear to be the cause of Chrome's recent
ERR_SSL_BAD_CLIENT_AUTH_CERT spike, but we should send these correctly
nonetheless.
If the early callback fails, handshake_failure seems the most
appropriate ("I was unable to find suitable parameters"). There isn't
really an alert that matches DoS, but internal_error seems okay?
internal_error
An internal error unrelated to the peer or the correctness of the
protocol (such as a memory allocation failure) makes it impossible
to continue. This message is always fatal.
There's nothing wrong, per se, with your ClientHello, but I just can't
deal with it right now. Please go away.
Change-Id: Icd1c998c09dc42daa4b309c1a4a0f136b85eb69d
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This withdraws support for -DBORINGSSL_ENABLE_RC4_TLS, and removes the
RC4 AEADs.
Change-Id: I1321b76bfe047d180743fa46d1b81c5d70c64e81
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Conscrypt would like to write a CTS test that the callback isn't set
unexpectedly.
Change-Id: I11f987422daf0544e90f5cff4d7aaf557ac1f5a2
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I'm not sure what happened here. These are both the same as
MissingKeyShare-Client.
Change-Id: I6601ed378d8639c1b59034f1e96c09a683bb62ca
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Reason for revert: Right now in TLS 1.3, certificate_auth is exactly
the same as whether we're doing resumption. With the weird reauth
stuff punted to later in the spec, having extra state is just more
room for bugs to creep in.
Original issue's description:
> Determining certificate_auth and key_exchange based on SSL.
>
> This allows us to switch TLS 1.3 to use non-cipher based negotiation
> without needing to use separate functions between 1.3 and below.
>
> BUG=77
>
> Change-Id: I9207e7a6793cb69e8300e2c15afe3548cbf82af2
> Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/10803
> Reviewed-by: David Benjamin <davidben@google.com>
> Commit-Queue: David Benjamin <davidben@google.com>
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>
Change-Id: I240e3ee959ffd1f2481a06eabece3af554d20ffa
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It's easy to forget to check those. Unfortunately, it's also easy to
forget to check inner structures, which is going to be harder to stress,
but do these to start with. In doing, so fix up and unify some
error-handling, and add a missing check when parsing TLS 1.2
CertificateRequest.
This was also inspired by the recent IETF posting.
Change-Id: I27fe3cd3506258389a75d486036388400f0a33ba
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This will let us use the same test scenarios for testing messages with
trailing garbage or skipped messages.
Change-Id: I9f177983e8dabb6c94d3d8443d224b79a58f40b1
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This was done just by grepping for 'size_t i;' and 'size_t j;'. I left
everything in crypto/x509 and friends alone.
There's some instances in gcm.c that are non-trivial and pulled into a
separate CL for ease of review.
Change-Id: I6515804e3097f7e90855f1e7610868ee87117223
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Change-Id: I676d7fb00d63d74946b96c22ae2705072033c5f7
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This allows us to switch TLS 1.3 to use non-cipher based negotiation
without needing to use separate functions between 1.3 and below.
BUG=77
Change-Id: I9207e7a6793cb69e8300e2c15afe3548cbf82af2
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This simplifies the logic around SSL_clear to reset the state for a new
handshake. The state around here is still a little iffy, but this is a
slight improvement.
The SSL_ST_CONNECT and SSL_ST_ACCEPT states are still kept separate to
avoid problems with the info callback reporting SSL_ST_INIT. Glancing
through info callback consumers, although they're all debugging, they
tend to assume that all intermediate states either have only
SSL_ST_CONNECT set or only SSL_ST_ACCEPT set.
(They also all look identical which makes me think it's copy-and-pasted
from OpenSSL command-line tool or something.)
Change-Id: I55503781e52b51b4ca829256c14de6f5942dae51
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/10760
Reviewed-by: Adam Langley <agl@google.com>
This mechanism is incompatible with deploying draft versions of TLS 1.3.
Suppose a draft M client talks to a draft N server, M != N. (Either M or
N could also be the final standard revision should there be lingering
draft clients or servers.) The server will notice the mismatch and
pretend ClientHello.version is TLS 1.2, not TLS 1.3. But this will
trigger anti-downgrade signal and cause an interop failure! And if it
doesn't trigger, all the clever tricks around ServerHello.random being
signed in TLS 1.2 are moot.
We'll put this back when the dust has settled.
Change-Id: Ic3cf72b7c31ba91e5cca0cfd7a3fca830c493a43
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Not that this matters in the slightest, but the recent IETF mailing
reminded me we don't test this.
Change-Id: I300c96d6a63733d538a7019a7cb74d4e65d0498f
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Although RFC 6066 recommends against it, some servers send a warning
alert prior to ServerHello on SNI mismatch, and, per spec, TLS 1.2
allows it.
We're fine here, but add a test for it. It interacts interestingly with
TLS 1.3 forbidding warning alerts because it happens before version
negotiation.
Change-Id: I0032313c986c835b6ae1aa43da6ee0dad17a97c2
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Now that we have the extern "C++" trick, we can just embed them in the
normal headers. Move the EVP_CIPHER_CTX deleter to cipher.h and, in
doing so, take away a little bit of boilerplate in defining deleters.
Change-Id: I4a4b8d0db5274a3607914d94e76a38996bd611ec
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Change-Id: I00507014c55b2c7fd442a5aa2c3afcbf8c48049b
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Unlike the Scoped* types, bssl::UniquePtr is available to C++ users, and
offered for a large variety of types. The 'extern "C++"' trick is used
to make the C++ bits digestible to C callers that wrap header files in
'extern "C"'.
Change-Id: Ifbca4c2997d6628e33028c7d7620c72aff0f862e
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Add a test that RSA-PSS is available in TLS 1.2 by default, both for
signing and verifying. Note that if a custom SSL_PRIVATE_KEY_METHOD is
used and it sets signing preferences, it won't use RSA-PSS if it doesn't
know about it. (See *-Sign-Negotiate-* tests.)
Change-Id: I3776a0c95480188a135795f7ebf31f2b0e0626cc
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The early callback needs to run before even version negotiation has been
resolved.
Change-Id: Ibb449ccec07dedef19b7827400ef318fa2f422c0
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Changing parameters on renegotiation makes all our APIs confusing. This
one has no reason to change, so lock it down. In particular, our
preference to forbid Token Binding + renego may be overridden at the
IETF, even though it's insane. Loosening it will be a bit less of a
headache if EMS can't change.
https://www.ietf.org/mail-archive/web/unbearable/current/msg00690.html
claims that this is already in the specification and enforced by NSS. I
can't find anything to this effect in the specification. It just says
the client MUST disable renegotiation when EMS is missing, which is
wishful thinking. At a glance, NSS doesn't seem to check, though I could
be misunderstanding the code.
Nonetheless, locking this down is a good idea anyway. Accurate or not,
take the email as an implicit endorsement of this from Mozilla.
Change-Id: I236b05991d28bed199763dcf2f47bbfb9d0322d7
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For now, they can be restored by compiling with -DBORINGSSL_RC4_TLS.
Of note, this means that `MEDIUM' is now empty.
Change-Id: Ic77308e7bd4849bdb2b4882c6b34af85089fe3cc
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If code tries to inspect the verify result in the case of a failure then
it seems reasonable that the error code should be in there.
Change-Id: Ic32ac9d340c2c10a405a7b6580f22a06427f041d
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4aa154e08f changed the code to assume that
a session callback will zero the |copy| out-arg before returning NULL.
In practice this doesn't always happen and we should be robust against
it.
Change-Id: I0fd14969df836e0fa4f68ded8648fea8094ff9d7
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To ease the removal of RC4, use 3DES in cases where RC4 is not required,
but is just a placeholder for "ciphersuite that works in SSLv3."
Change-Id: Ib459173e68a662986235b556f330a7e0e02759d7
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nginx consumes these error codes without #ifdefs. Continue to define
them for compatibility, even though we never emit them.
BUG=95
Change-Id: I1e991987ce25fc4952cc85b98ffa050a8beab92e
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peer_sigalgs should live on SSL_HANDSHAKE. This both releases a little
bit of memory after the handshake is over and also avoids the bug where
the sigalgs get dropped if SSL_set_SSL_CTX is called at a bad time. See
also upstream's 14e14bf6964965d02ce89805d9de867f000095aa.
This only affects consumers using the old SNI callback and not
select_certificate_cb.
Add a test that the SNI callback works as expected. In doing so, add an
SSL_CTX version of the signing preferences API. This is a property of
the cert/key pair (really just the key) and should be tied to that. This
makes it a bit easier to have the regression test work with TLS 1.2 too.
I thought we'd fixed this already, but apparently not... :-/
BUG=95
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None of these extensions may be negotiated in TLS 1.3 and are otherwise
on by default. Make the future QUIC/TLS1.3 ClientHello a hair smaller.
Change-Id: I613c339d95470676c78f21fd29e888b7701692c6
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Apparently we forgot to do this.
Change-Id: I348cf6d716ae888fddce69ba4801bf09446f5a72
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Chromium has switched to better APIs.
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Change-Id: Ie60744761f5aa434a71a998f5ca98a8f8b1c25d5
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/10447
Reviewed-by: David Benjamin <davidben@google.com>
Commit-Queue: David Benjamin <davidben@google.com>
CQ-Verified: CQ bot account: commit-bot@chromium.org <commit-bot@chromium.org>