This reduces us from seven different configuration patterns to six (see
comment #2 of linked bug). I do not believe there is any behavior change
here as SSL_set_SSL_CTX already manually copied the field. It now gives
us a nice invariant: SSL_set_SSL_CTX overrides all and only the
dual-SSL/SSL_CTX options hanging off of CERT.
BUG=123
Change-Id: I1ae06b791fb869917a6503cee41afb2d9be53d89
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I'm not sure why the SSL versions of these functions return int while
the SSL_CTX version returns void. It looks like this dates to
https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/c/1491/, of which the initial
upload was an SSL_ctrl macro. I guess one of the ints got accidentally
preserved in conversion.
(No existing caller, aside from bssl_shim, checks the result.)
Change-Id: Id54309c1aa03462d520b9a45cdfdefdd2cdd1298
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0-RTT requires matching the selected ALPN parameters against those in
the session. Stash the ALPN value in the session in TLS 1.3, so we can
recover it.
BUG=76
Change-Id: I8668b287651ae4deb0bf540c0885a02d189adee0
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Recent changes added SSL-level setters to these APIs. Unfortunately,
this has the side effect of breaking SSL_set_SSL_CTX, which is how SNI
is typically handled. SSL_set_SSL_CTX is kind of a weird function in
that it's very sensitive to which of the hodge-podge of config styles is
in use. I previously listed out all the config styles here, but it was
long and unhelpful. (I counted up to 7.)
Of the various SSL_set_SSL_CTX-visible config styles, the sanest seems
to be to move it to CERT. In this case, it's actually quite reasonable
since they're very certificate-related.
Later we may wish to think about whether we can cut down all 7 kinds of
config styles because this is kinda nuts. I'm wondering we should do
CERT => SSL_CONFIG, move everything there, and make that be the same
structure that is dropped post-handshake (supposing the caller has
disavowed SSL_clear and renego). Fruit for later thought. (Note though
that comes with a behavior change for all the existing config.)
Change-Id: I9aa47d8bd37bf2847869e0b577739d4d579ee4ae
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/13864
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All the business with rewinding hs->state back or skipping states based
on reuse_message or a skip parameter isn't really worth the trouble for
a debugging callback. With SSL_state no longer exposed, we don't have to
worry about breaking things.
BUG=177
Change-Id: I9a0421f01c8b2f24c80a6b3e44de9138ea023f58
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I doubt this matters, but this seems a little odd. In particular, this
avoids info_callback seeing the SSL_ST_OK once we stop switching
hs->state back and forth.
BUG=177
Change-Id: Ied39c0e94c242af9d5d0f26795d6e0f2f0b12406
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Code which manages to constrain itself on this will limit our ability to
rework the handshake. I believe, at this point, we only need to expose
one bit of information (there's some code that compares SSL_state to
SSL_ST_OK), if even that.
BUG=177
Change-Id: Ie1c43006737db0b974811f1819755c629ae68e7b
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|SSL_SESSION_from_bytes| now takes an |SSL_CTX*|, from which it uses the
|X509_METHOD| and buffer pool. This is our API so we can do this.
This also requires adding an |SSL_CTX*| argument to |SSL_SESSION_new|
for the same reason. However, |SSL_SESSION_new| already has very few
callers (and none in third-party code that I can see) so I think we can
get away with this.
Change-Id: I1337cd2bd8cff03d4b9405ea3146b3b59584aa72
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Change-Id: I98903df561bbf8c5739f892d2ad5e89ac0eb8e6f
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These are meant to make Android libcore's usage of BIGNUMs for java
BigIntegers faster and nicer (specifically, so that it doesn't need
to malloc a bunch of temporary BIGNUMs).
BUG=97
Change-Id: I5f30e14c6d8c66a9848d4935ce27d030829f6923
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Change-Id: If97da565155292d5f0de5c6a8b0fd8508398768a
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Right now the only way to set an SCT list is the per-context function
SSL_CTX_set_signed_cert_timestamp_list. However this assumes that all the
SSLs generated from a SSL_CTX share the same SCT list, which is wrong.
In order to avoid memory duplication in case SSL_CTX has its own list, a
CRYPTO_BUFFER is used for both SSL_CTX and SSL.
Change-Id: Id20e6f128c33cf3e5bff1be390645441be6518c6
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As previously discussed, it turns out we don't actually need this, so
there's no point in keeping it.
Change-Id: If549c917b6bd818cd36948e37cb7839c8d122b1a
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I believe these are now unused.
Change-Id: I438da3d56ca598260fe0f5698ccb6649bd97b859
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Using the arg parameter does not work well. This is purely an
SSL_CTX-level callback, not an SSL-level one.
Change-Id: Ib968807efbe7dd08e71cea1c4d8034a52c729d45
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This is purely to support curl, which now has HTTPS proxy support that,
sadly, uses the BIO SSL. Don't use the BIO SSL for anything else.
Change-Id: I9ef6c9773ec87a11e0b5a93968386ac4b351986d
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The version negotiation logic was a little bizarrely wedged in the
middle of the state machine. (We don't support server renegotiation, so
have_version is always false here.)
BUG=128
Change-Id: I9448dce374004b92e8bd5172c36a4e0eea51619c
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/13561
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In TLS 1.2, resumption's benefits are more-or-less subsumed by False
Start. TLS 1.2 resumption lifetime is bounded by how much traffic we are
willing to encrypt without fresh key material, so the lifetime is short.
Renewal uses the same key, so we do not allow it to increase lifetimes.
In TLS 1.3, resumption unlocks 0-RTT. We do not implement psk_ke, so
resumption incorporates fresh key material into both encrypted traffic
(except for early data) and renewed tickets. Thus we are both more
willing to and more interested in longer lifetimes for tickets. Renewal
is also not useless. Thus in TLS 1.3, lifetime is bound separately by
the lifetime of a given secret as a psk_dhe_ke authenticator and the
lifetime of the online signature which authenticated the initial
handshake.
This change maintains two lifetimes on an SSL_SESSION: timeout which is
the renewable lifetime of this ticket, and auth_timeout which is the
non-renewable cliff. It also separates the TLS 1.2 and TLS 1.3 timeouts.
The old session timeout defaults and configuration apply to TLS 1.3, and
we define new ones for TLS 1.3.
Finally, this makes us honor the NewSessionTicket timeout in TLS 1.3.
It's no longer a "hint" in 1.3 and there's probably value in avoiding
known-useless 0-RTT offers.
BUG=120
Change-Id: Iac46d56e5a6a377d8b88b8fa31f492d534cb1b85
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/13503
Reviewed-by: Adam Langley <agl@google.com>
This special-case is almost unexposed (the timeout is initialized to the
default) except if the caller calls SSL_CTX_set_timeout(0). Preserve
that behavior by mapping 0 to SSL_DEFAULT_SESSION_TIMEOUT in
SSL_CTX_set_timeout but simplify the internal state.
Change-Id: Ice03a519c25284b925f1e0cf485f2d8c54dc5038
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These are completely unused, but for BIO_set_write_buffer_size which is
in some (unreachable) nginx codepath. Keep that around so nginx
continues to build, but otherwise delete it.
Change-Id: I1a50a4f7b23e5fdbc7f132900ecacd74e8775a7f
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Change-Id: I324743e7d1864fbbb9653209ff93e4da872c8d31
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The TLS 1.2 state machine now looks actually much closer to the TLS 1.3
one on the write side. Although the write states still have a BIO-style
return, they don't actually send anything anymore. Only the BIO flush
state does. Reads are still integrated into the states themselves
though, so I haven't made it match TLS 1.3 yet.
BUG=72
Change-Id: I7708162efca13cd335723efa5080718a5f2808ab
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/13228
Reviewed-by: Adam Langley <agl@google.com>
On the TLS side, we introduce a running buffer of ciphertext. Queuing up
pending data consists of encrypting the record into the buffer. This
effectively reimplements what the buffer BIO was doing previously, but
this resizes to fit the whole flight.
As part of this, rename all the functions to add to the pending flight
to be more uniform. This CL proposes "add_foo" to add to the pending
flight and "flush_flight" to drain it.
We add an add_alert hook for alerts but, for now, only the SSL 3.0
warning alert (sent mid-handshake) uses this mechanism. Later work will
push this down to the rest of the write path so closure alerts use it
too, as in DTLS. The intended end state is that all the ssl_buffer.c and
wpend_ret logic will only be used for application data and eventually
optionally replaced by the in-place API, while all "incidental" data
will be handled internally.
For now, the two buffers are mutually exclusive. Moving closure alerts
to "incidentals" will change this, but flushing application data early
is tricky due to wpend_ret. (If we call ssl_write_buffer_flush,
do_ssl3_write doesn't realize it still has a wpend_ret to replay.) That
too is all left alone in this change.
To keep the diff down, write_message is retained for now and will be
removed from the state machines in a follow-up change.
BUG=72
Change-Id: Ibce882f5f7196880648f25d5005322ca4055c71d
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/13224
Reviewed-by: Adam Langley <agl@google.com>
Instead, "writing" a message merely adds it to the outgoing_messages
structure. The code to write the flight then loops over it all and now
shares code with retransmission. The verbs here are all a little odd,
but they'll be fixed in later commits.
In doing so, this fixes a slight miscalculation of the record-layer
overhead when retransmitting a flight that spans two epochs. (We'd use
the encrypted epoch's overhead for the unencrypted epoch.)
BUG=72
Change-Id: I8ac897c955cc74799f8b5ca6923906e97d6dad17
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/13223
Reviewed-by: Adam Langley <agl@google.com>
These are no longer used anywhere.
Change-Id: Id79299f92c705f6bb7aed7acb48994d4498bd2d8
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Change-Id: Ifc28887cbf91c7a80bdaf56e3bf80b2f8cfa7d53
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It's not completely clear to me why select_cetificate_cb behaves the way it
does, however not only is it confusing, but it makes assumptions about the
application using BoringSSL (it's not always possible to implement custom
logic outside of the callbacks provided by libssl), that make this callback
somewhat useless.
Case in point, the callback can be used for changing min/max protocol versions
based on per-site policies, and select_certificate_cb is the only place where
SSL_set_min/max_proto_version() can be used (e.g. you can't call them in
cert_cb because it's too late), but the decision on the specific versions to
use might depend on configuration that needs retrieving asynchronously from
over the network, which requires re-running the callback multiple times.
Change-Id: Ia8e151b163628545373e7fd1f327e9af207478a6
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We have a test somewhere which tries to read off of it. Align the getter
roughly with upstream's SSL_SESSION_get0_id_context (which we don't
currently expose).
BUG=6
Change-Id: Iab240868838ba56c1f08d112888d9536574347b4
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Before RFC 7539 we had a ChaCha20-Poly1305 cipher suite that had a 64/64
nonce/counter split (as DJB's original ChaCha20 did). RFC 7539 changed
that to 96/32 and we've supported both for some time.
This change removes the old version and the TLS cipher suites that used
it.
BUG=chromium:682816
Change-Id: I2345d6db83441691fe0c1ab6d7c6da4d24777849
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/13203
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This reverts commit def9b46801.
(I should have uploaded a new version before sending to the commit queue.)
Change-Id: Iaead89c8d7fc1f56e6294d869db9238b467f520a
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TLS 1.3 forbids warning alerts, and sending these is a bad idea. Per RFC
6066:
If the server understood the ClientHello extension but
does not recognize the server name, the server SHOULD take one of two
actions: either abort the handshake by sending a fatal-level
unrecognized_name(112) alert or continue the handshake. It is NOT
RECOMMENDED to send a warning-level unrecognized_name(112) alert,
because the client's behavior in response to warning-level alerts is
unpredictable.
The motivation is to cut down on the number of places where we send
non-closing alerts. We can't remove them yet (SSL 3.0 and TLS 1.3 draft
18 need to go), but eventually this can be a simplifying assumption.
Already this means DTLS never sends warning alerts, which is good
because DTLS can't retransmit them.
Change-Id: I577a1eb9c23e66d28235c0fbe913f00965e19486
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Reviewed-by: Adam Langley <agl@google.com>
Before RFC 7539 we had a ChaCha20-Poly1305 cipher suite that had a 64/64
nonce/counter split (as DJB's original ChaCha20 did). RFC 7539 changed
that to 96/32 and we've supported both for some time.
This change removes the old version and the TLS cipher suites that used
it.
Change-Id: Icd9c2117c657f3aa6df55990c618d562194ef0e8
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Change-Id: Ia6598ee4b2d4623abfc140d6a5c0eca4bcb30427
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These are no longer needed.
Change-Id: I909f7d690f57dafcdad6254948b5683757da69f4
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/13160
Commit-Queue: David Benjamin <davidben@google.com>
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This change adds the OS-specific routines to get random bytes when using
BoringSSL on Fuchsia. Fuchsia uses the Magenta kernel, which provides
random bytes via a syscall rather than via a file or library function.
Change-Id: I32f858246425309d643d142214c7b8de0c62250a
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The last one was an RC4 cipher and those are gone.
Change-Id: I3473937ff6f0634296fc75a346627513c5970ddb
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/13108
Reviewed-by: Adam Langley <agl@google.com>
BN_FLG_CONSTTIME is a ridiculous API and easy to mess up
(CVE-2016-2178). Instead, code that needs a particular algorithm which
preserves secrecy of some arguemnt should call into that algorithm
directly.
This is never set outside the library and is finally unused within the
library! Credit for all this goes almost entirely to Brian Smith. I just
took care of the last bits.
Note there was one BN_FLG_CONSTTIME check that was still reachable, the
BN_mod_inverse in RSA key generation. However, it used the same code in
both cases for even moduli and φ(n) is even if n is not a power of two.
Traditionally, RSA keys are not powers of two, even though it would make
the modular reductions a lot easier.
When reviewing, check that I didn't remove a BN_FLG_CONSTTIME that led
to a BN_mod_exp(_mont) or BN_mod_inverse call (with the exception of the
RSA one mentioned above). They should all go to functions for the
algorithms themselves like BN_mod_exp_mont_consttime.
This CL shows the checks are a no-op for all our tests:
https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/c/12927/
BUG=125
Change-Id: I19cbb375cc75aac202bd76b51ca098841d84f337
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/12926
Reviewed-by: Adam Langley <alangley@gmail.com>
TLS 1.3 doesn't support renegotiation in the first place, but so callers
don't report TLS 1.3 servers as missing it, always report it as
(vacuously) protected against this bug.
BUG=chromium:680281
Change-Id: Ibfec03102b2aec7eaa773c331d6844292e7bb685
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Change-Id: Iad9b0898b3a602fc2e554c4fd59a599c61cd8ef7
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Commit-Queue: David Benjamin <davidben@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Adam Langley <alangley@gmail.com>
They're not called externally. Unexporting these will make it easier to
rewrite the PKCS{5,8,12} code to use CBS/CBB rather than X509_ALGOR.
Getting rid of those callers in Chromium probably won't happen for a
while since it's in our on-disk formats. (And a unit test for some NSS
client cert glue uses it.)
BUG=54
Change-Id: Id4148a2ad567484782a6e0322b68dde0619159fc
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Towards an eventual goal of opaquifying BoringSSL structs, we want
our consumers -- in this case, Android's libcore -- to not directly
manipulate BigNums; and it would be convenient for them if we would
perform the appropriate gymnastics to interpret little-endian byte
streams.
It also seems a priori a bit strange to have only big-endian varieties
of BN byte-conversions.
This CL provides little-endian equivalents of BN_bn2bin_padded
and BN_bin2bn.
BUG=97
Change-Id: I0e92483286def86d9bd71a46d6a967a3be50f80b
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This adds support for setting 0-RTT mode on tickets minted by
BoringSSL, allowing for testing of the initial handshake knowledge.
BUG=76
Change-Id: Ic199842c03b5401ef122a537fdb7ed9e9a5c635a
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This is a memory error for anything other than LHASH_OF(char), which
does not exist.
No code outside the library creates (or even queries) an LHASH, so we
can change this module freely.
Change-Id: Ifbc7a1c69a859e07650fcfaa067bdfc68d83fbbc
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/12978
Commit-Queue: David Benjamin <davidben@google.com>
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BUG=97
Change-Id: I4799cc99511e73af44def1d4daa36a8b4699f62d
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The perl script is a little nuts. obj_dat.pl actually parses the header
file that objects.pl emits to figure out what all the objects are.
Replace it all with a single Go script.
BUG=16
Change-Id: Ib1492e22dbe4cf9cf84db7648612b156bcec8e63
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/12963
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This extension will be used to test whether
https://github.com/tlswg/tls13-spec/pull/762 is deployable against
middleboxes. For simplicity, it is mutually exclusive with 0-RTT. If
client and server agree on the extension, TLS 1.3 records will use the
format in the PR rather than what is in draft 18.
BUG=119
Change-Id: I1372ddf7b328ddf73d496df54ac03a95ede961e1
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/12684
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X509_STORE_set0_additional_untrusted allows one to set a stack of
additional untrusted certificates that can be used during chain
building. These will be merged with the untrusted certificates set on
the |X509_STORE_CTX|.
Change-Id: I3f011fb0854e16a883a798356af0a24cbc5a9d68
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Simplify the code, and in particular make |BN_div|, |BN_mod|, and
|BN_nnmod| insensitive to |BN_FLG_CONSTTIME|. This improves the
effectiveness of testing by reducing the number of branches that are
likely to go untested or less tested.
There is no performance-sensitive code that uses BN_div but doesn't
already use BN_FLG_CONSTTIME except RSA signature verification and
EC_GROUP creation. RSA signature verification, ECDH, and ECDSA
performance aren't significantly different with this change.
Change-Id: Ie34c4ce925b939150529400cc60e1f414c7676cd
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/9105
Reviewed-by: David Benjamin <davidben@google.com>
Commit-Queue: David Benjamin <davidben@google.com>
There are no longer any consumers of these APIs.
These were useful back when the CBC vs. RC4 tradeoff varied by version
and it was worth carefully tuning this cutoff. Nowadays RC4 is
completely gone and there's no use in configuring these anymore.
To avoid invalidating the existing ssl_ctx_api corpus and requiring it
regenerated, I've left the entries in there. It's probably reasonable
for new API fuzzers to reuse those slots.
Change-Id: I02bf950e3828062341e4e45c8871a44597ae93d5
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/12880
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-2 is really weird. On sign, it's maximal length. On verify, it actually
accepts all lengths. This sounds somewhat questionable to me, but just
document the state of the world for now. Also add a recommendation to
use -1 (match digest length) to align with TLS 1.3, tokbind, and QUIC
Crypto. Hopefully the first two is sufficient that the IETF will forever
use this option and stop the proliferation of RSA-PSS parameters.
Change-Id: Ie0ad7ad451089df0e18d6413d1b21c5aaad9d0f2
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/12823
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This function always returns the full chain and will hopefully eliminate
the need for some code in Conscrypt.
Change-Id: Ib662005322c40824edf09d100a784ff00492896a
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/12780
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Querying a bit in a BIT STRING is a little finicky. Add some functions
to help with this.
Change-Id: I813b9b6f2d952d61d8717b47bca1344f0ad4b7d1
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So we can report it cleanly out of DevTools, it should behave like
SSL_get_curve_id and be reported on resumption too.
BUG=chromium:658905
Change-Id: I0402e540a1e722e09eaebadf7fb4785d8880c389
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/12694
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The only accessor for this field is the group/curve ID. Switch to only
storing that so no cipher checks are needed to interpret it. Instead,
ignore older values at parse time.
Change-Id: Id0946d4ac9e7482c69e64cc368a9d0cddf328bd3
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Nothing calls this anymore. DHE is nearly gone. This unblocks us from
making key_exchange_info only apply to the curve.
Change-Id: I3099e7222a62441df6e01411767d48166a0729b1
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This change removes the use of |X509_get_pubkey| from the TLS <= 1.2
code. That function is replaced with a shallow parse of the certificate
to extract the public key instead.
Change-Id: I8938c6c5a01b32038c6b6fa58eb065e5b44ca6d2
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This currently only works for certificates parsed from the network, but
if making several connections that share certificates, some KB of memory
might be saved.
BUG=chromium:671420
Change-Id: I1c7a71d84e1976138641f71830aafff87f795f9d
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This change adds a STACK_OF(CRYPTO_BUFFER) to an SSL_SESSION which
contains the raw form of the received certificates. The X509-based
members still exist, but their |enc| buffer will alias the
CRYPTO_BUFFERs.
(This is a second attempt at
https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/#/c/12163/.)
BUG=chromium:671420
Change-Id: I508a8a46cab89a5a3fcc0c1224185d63e3d59cb8
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OpenSSL includes a leaf certificate in a certificate chain when it's a
client, but doesn't when it's a server. This is also reflected in the
serialisation of sessions.
This change makes the internal semantics consistent: the leaf is always
included in the chain in memory, and never duplicated when serialised.
To maintain the same API, SSL_get_peer_cert_chain will construct a copy
of the chain without the leaf if needed.
Since the serialised format of a client session has changed, an
|is_server| boolean is added to the ASN.1 that defaults to true. Thus
any old client sessions will be parsed as server sessions and (silently)
discarded by a client.
Change-Id: Ibcf72bc8a130cedb423bc0fd3417868e0af3ca3e
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state is now initialized to SSL_ST_INIT in SSL_HANDSHAKE. If there is no
handshake present, we report SSL_ST_OK. This saves 8 bytes of
per-connection post-handshake memory.
Change-Id: Idb3f7031045caed005bd7712bc8c4b42c81a1d04
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This avoids needing a extra state around client certificates to avoid
calling the callbacks twice. This does, however, come with a behavior
change: configuring both callbacks won't work. No consumer does this.
(Except bssl_shim which needed slight tweaks.)
Change-Id: Ia5426ed2620e40eecdcf352216c4a46764e31a9a
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/12690
Reviewed-by: Adam Langley <agl@google.com>
This is never used. Removing it allows us to implement the old callback
using the new one.
Change-Id: I4be70cc16e609ce79b51836c19fec565c67ff3d6
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/12689
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Callers doing more interesting things than read and write tend to use
SSL_get_error. SSL_want_{read,write} are still used, however.
Change-Id: I21e83cc8046742857051f755868d86deffd23d81
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/12688
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One of them is used in the new minimal SSL BIO, but cURL doesn't consume
it, so let's just leave it out. A consumer using asynchronous
certificate lookup is unlikely to be doing anything with SSL BIOs.
Change-Id: I10e7bfd643d3a531d42a96a8d675611d13722bd2
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/12686
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For folks who prefer the named length constants, the current ones aren't
sufficient because the shared key isn't the private key or a public
value.
Well, it does have the same type as a public value, but it looks silly
to write:
uint8_t secret_key[X25519_PUBLIC_VALUE_LEN];
Change-Id: I391db8ee73e2b4305d0ddd22f6d99f6abbc6b45b
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Change-Id: Iaac633616a54ba1ed04c14e4778865c169a68621
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/12703
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This reverts commits 5a6e616961 and
e8509090cf. I'm going to unify how the
chains are kept in memory between client and server first otherwise the
mess just keeps growing.
Change-Id: I76df0d94c9053b2454821d22a3c97951b6419831
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Change-Id: Ie947ab176d10feb709c6e135d5241c6cf605b8e8
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This currently only works for certificates parsed from the network, but
if making several connections that share certificates, some KB of memory
might be saved.
Change-Id: I0ea4589d7a8b5c41df225ad7f282b6d1376a8db4
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/12164
Reviewed-by: Adam Langley <alangley@gmail.com>
This change adds a STACK_OF(CRYPTO_BUFFER) to an SSL_SESSION which
contains the raw form of the received certificates. The X509-based
members still exist, but their |enc| buffer will alias the
CRYPTO_BUFFERs.
The serialisation format of SSL_SESSIONs is also changed, in a backwards
compatible way. Previously, some sessions would duplicate the leaf
certificate in the certificate chain. These sessions can still be read,
but will be written in a way incompatible with older versions of the
code. This should be fine because the situation where multiple versions
exchange serialised sessions is at the server, and the server doesn't
duplicate the leaf certifiate in the chain anyway.
Change-Id: Id3b75d24f1745795315cb7f8089a4ee4263fa938
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/12163
Reviewed-by: Adam Langley <alangley@gmail.com>
A recent change to curl[1] added support for HTTPS proxies, which
involves running a TLS connection inside another TLS connection. This
was done by using SSL BIOs, which we removed from BoringSSL for being
crazy.
This change adds a stripped-down version of the SSL BIO to decrepit in
order to suport curl.
[1] cb4e2be7c6
Change-Id: I9cb8f2db5b28a5a70724f6f93544297c380ac124
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/12631
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Right now the only way to set an OCSP response is SSL_CTX_set_ocsp_response
however this assumes that all the SSLs generated from a SSL_CTX share the
same OCSP response, which is wrong.
This is similar to the OpenSSL "function" SSL_get_tlsext_status_ocsp_resp,
the main difference being that this doesn't take ownership of the OCSP buffer.
In order to avoid memory duplication in case SSL_CTX has its own response,
a CRYPTO_BUFFER is used for both SSL_CTX and SSL.
Change-Id: I3a0697f82b805ac42a22be9b6bb596aa0b530025
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All callers were long since updated.
Change-Id: Ibdc9b186076dfbcbc3bd7dcc72610c8d5a522cfc
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size_t at the public API, uint8_t on the SSL structs since everything
fits in there comfortably.
Change-Id: I837c3b21e04e03dfb957c1a3e6770300d0b49c0b
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There is no need to retain it beyond this point.
Change-Id: Ib5722ab30fc013380198b1582d1240f0fe0aa770
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/12620
Reviewed-by: Adam Langley <agl@google.com>
This was useful when we were transitioning NPN off in Chromium, but now
there are no callers remaining.
Change-Id: Ic619613d6d475eea6bc258c4a90148f129ea4a81
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/12637
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This was only used by Chromium and was since replaced with a custom BIO.
Though it meant a new ring buffer implementation, custom BIOs seem a
better solution for folks who wish to do particularly complicated
things, until the new SSL API is available. External-buffer BIO pairs
were effectively a really confusing and leaky abstraction over a ring
buffer anyway.
Change-Id: I0e201317ff87cdccb17b2f8c260ee5bb06c74771
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/12626
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This allows a consumer to disable Channel ID (for instance, it may be
enabled on the SSL_CTX and later disabled on the SSL) without reaching
into the SSL struct directly.
Deprecate the old APIs in favor of these.
BUG=6
Change-Id: I193bf94bc1f537e1a81602a39fc2b9a73f44c73b
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This is an API which we added, so only first-party code could be
conditioning on it.
Change-Id: I08217fcae47585b22142df05622e31b6dfb6e4d6
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It's our ClientHello representation. May as well name it accordingly.
Also switch away from calling the variable name ctx as that conflicts
with SSL_CTX.
Change-Id: Iec0e597af37137270339e9754c6e08116198899e
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AES-GCM-SIV is an AEAD with nonce-misuse resistance. It can reuse
hardware support for AES-GCM and thus encrypt at ~66% the speed, and
decrypt at 100% the speed, of AES-GCM.
See https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-irtf-cfrg-gcmsiv-02
This implementation is generic, not optimised, and reuses existing AES
and GHASH support as much as possible. It is guarded by !OPENSSL_SMALL,
at least for now.
Change-Id: Ia9f77b256ef5dfb8588bb9ecfe6ee0e827626f57
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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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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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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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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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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
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/11845
Reviewed-by: Adam Langley <agl@google.com>
Commit-Queue: Adam Langley <agl@google.com>
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As a client, we must tolerate this to avoid interoperability failures
with allowed server behaviors.
BUG=117
Change-Id: I9c40a2a048282e2e63ab5ee1d40773fc2eda110a
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/12311
Reviewed-by: David Benjamin <davidben@google.com>
For the most part, this is with random test data which isn't
particularly good. But we'll be able to add more interesting test
vectors as they come up.
Change-Id: I9c50db7ac2c4bf978d4901000ab32e3642aea82b
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/12222
Reviewed-by: Adam Langley <agl@google.com>
Commit-Queue: Adam Langley <agl@google.com>
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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
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/12229
Reviewed-by: David Benjamin <davidben@google.com>
Commit-Queue: David Benjamin <davidben@google.com>
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We have at least three different external build definitions for the
fuzzers. That's enough that requiring each of them account for the split
fuzzer mode is probably too much turbulence.
Change-Id: I96dbb12a2b4f70bfa1b04cd0d15fda918bbf51d6
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/12183
Commit-Queue: David Benjamin <davidben@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Adam Langley <agl@google.com>
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>
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>
Change-Id: I33a9cb2cc13f2ed64a6bf2728cd3fcc980e1408f
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/12161
Commit-Queue: Adam Langley <agl@google.com>
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In https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/#/c/11920/2, I addressed a
number of comments but then forgot to upload the change before
submitting it. This change contains the changes that should have been
included in that commit.
Change-Id: Ib70548e791f80abf07a734e071428de8ebedb907
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/12160
Commit-Queue: Adam Langley <agl@google.com>
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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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This function allows callers to unpack an Ed25519 “seed” value, which is
a 32 byte value that contains sufficient information to build a public
and private key from.
Change-Id: Ie5d8212a73e5710306314b4f8a93b707665870fd
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/12040
Reviewed-by: David Benjamin <davidben@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Adam Langley <alangley@gmail.com>
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The naming breaks layering, but it seems we're stuck with it. We don't
seem to have bothered making first-party code call it BIO_print_errors
(I found no callers of BIO_print_errors), so let's just leave it at
ERR_print_errors.
Change-Id: Iddc22a6afc2c61d4b94ac555be95079e0f477171
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/11960
Commit-Queue: David Benjamin <davidben@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Adam Langley <agl@google.com>
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>
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 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>
d2i_X509_from_buffer parses an |X509| from a |CRYPTO_BUFFER| but ensures
that the |X509_CINF.enc| doesn't make a copy of the encoded
TBSCertificate. Rather the |X509| holds a reference to the given
|CRYPTO_BUFFER|.
Change-Id: I38a4e3d0ca69fc0fd0ef3e15b53181844080fcad
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/11920
Reviewed-by: David Benjamin <davidben@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Adam Langley <alangley@gmail.com>
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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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Tagging non-pointer return types const doesn't do anything and makes
some compilers grumpy. Thanks to Daniel Hirche for the report.
Change-Id: I157ddefd8f7e604b4d8317ffa2caddb8f0dd89de
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/11849
Commit-Queue: David Benjamin <davidben@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Adam Langley <agl@google.com>
This patch changes the urandom PRNG to read one byte from the
getrandom(2) Linux syscall on initialization in order to find any
unexpected behavior.
Change-Id: I8ef676854dc361e4f77527b53d1a14fd14d449a8
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/8681
Reviewed-by: Adam Langley <alangley@gmail.com>
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These structures allow for blobs of data (e.g. certificates) to be
deduplicated in memory.
Change-Id: Iebfec90b85d55565848a178b6951562b4ccc083e
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/11820
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The EVP_PKEY attribute functions in x509.h are unimplemented.
Change-Id: Idcf2d81e58b04d0829d25567a145f87801a980d1
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/10343
Reviewed-by: Adam Langley <agl@google.com>
Nodejs 6.9.0 calls this function.
Change-Id: I375f222cb819ebcb9fdce0a0d63df6817fa2dcae
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/11625
Commit-Queue: Adam Langley <alangley@gmail.com>
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Macros need a healthy dose of parentheses to avoid expression-level
misparses. Most of this comes from the clang-tidy CL here:
https://android-review.googlesource.com/c/235696/
Also switch most of the macros to use do { ... } while (0) to avoid all
the excessive comma operators and statement-level misparses.
Change-Id: I4c2ee51e347d2aa8c74a2d82de63838b03bbb0f9
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/11660
Commit-Queue: David Benjamin <davidben@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Adam Langley <agl@google.com>
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>
This should land in the same group of revisions as the two parent
commits.
Change-Id: Id9d769b890b3308ea70b705e7241c73cb1930ede
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/11581
Commit-Queue: David Benjamin <davidben@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Steven Valdez <svaldez@google.com>
Reviewed-by: David Benjamin <davidben@google.com>
MinGW has two different versions of printf. We want the format string
warnings to match. This silences some warnings in the Android build.
See:
https://sourceforge.net/p/mingw-w64/wiki2/gnu%20printf/
Note this assumes that, for external calls of these functions, the build
configuration of the consumer and BoringSSL match in this regard. (But
it doesn't actually matter because the issue is only on XP.)
Change-Id: I7f12ad2fc94130edd984feac5914f8ca6c88b8d4
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/11572
Commit-Queue: David Benjamin <davidben@google.com>
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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>
Change-Id: Id8099cc3a250e36e62b8a48e74706b75e5fa127c
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/11566
Commit-Queue: David Benjamin <davidben@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Adam Langley <agl@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 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>
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: I5d4fc0d3204744e93d71a36923469035c19a5b10
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/11560
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Reviewed-by: Steven Valdez <svaldez@google.com>
Reviewed-by: David Benjamin <davidben@google.com>
Commit-Queue: David Benjamin <davidben@google.com>
BUG=77
Change-Id: If568412655aae240b072c29d763a5b17bb5ca3f7
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/10840
Reviewed-by: Steven Valdez <svaldez@google.com>
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BUG=77
Change-Id: Id8c45e98c4c22cdd437cbba1e9375239e123b261
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/10763
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This finally removes the last Android hack. Both Chromium and Android
end up needing this thing (Chromium needs it for WebCrypto but currently
uses the EVP_AEAD version and Android needs it by way of
wpa_supplicant).
On the Android side, the alternative is we finish upstream's
NEED_INTERNAL_AES_WRAP patch, but then it just uses its own key-wrap
implementation. This seems a little silly, considering we have a version
of key-wrap under a different API anyway.
It also doesn't make much sense to leave the EVP_AEAD API around if we
don't want people to use it and Chromium's the only consumer. Remove it
and I'll switch Chromium to the new---er, old--- APIs next roll.
Change-Id: I23a89cda25bddb6ac1033e4cd408165f393d1e6c
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/11410
Commit-Queue: David Benjamin <davidben@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Adam Langley <agl@google.com>
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
Reviewed-by: David Benjamin <davidben@google.com>
Commit-Queue: David Benjamin <davidben@google.com>
We have CBS_get_asn1 / CBS_get_asn1_element, but not the "any" variants
of them. Without this, a consumer walking a DER structure must manually
CBS_skip the header, which is a little annoying.
Change-Id: I7735c37eb9e5aaad2bde8407669bce5492e1ccf6
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/11404
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Some projects (NGINX, OpenResty, ...) check for the, uhm, "alphabetic"
part of OpenSSL versions as well.
Change-Id: Iaa0809437756bc805235a1f53f4d62c900d22ca5
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/11440
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Change-Id: I3e3eb16d58c94926c68991c3a5a4abe67d5bb6f2
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/11360
Commit-Queue: Matt Braithwaite <mab@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
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/11382
Reviewed-by: David Benjamin <davidben@google.com>
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Change-Id: I73f9fd64b46f26978b897409d817b34ec9d93afd
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/11080
Reviewed-by: Steven Valdez <svaldez@google.com>
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This change adds AES and GHASH assembly from upstream, with the aim of
speeding up AES-GCM.
The PPC64LE assembly matches the interface of the ARMv8 assembly so I've
changed the prefix of both sets of asm functions to be the same
("aes_hw_").
Otherwise, the new assmebly files and Perlasm match exactly those from
upstream's c536b6be1a (from their master branch).
Before:
Did 1879000 AES-128-GCM (16 bytes) seal operations in 1000428us (1878196.1 ops/sec): 30.1 MB/s
Did 61000 AES-128-GCM (1350 bytes) seal operations in 1006660us (60596.4 ops/sec): 81.8 MB/s
Did 11000 AES-128-GCM (8192 bytes) seal operations in 1072649us (10255.0 ops/sec): 84.0 MB/s
Did 1665000 AES-256-GCM (16 bytes) seal operations in 1000591us (1664016.6 ops/sec): 26.6 MB/s
Did 52000 AES-256-GCM (1350 bytes) seal operations in 1006971us (51640.0 ops/sec): 69.7 MB/s
Did 8840 AES-256-GCM (8192 bytes) seal operations in 1013294us (8724.0 ops/sec): 71.5 MB/s
After:
Did 4994000 AES-128-GCM (16 bytes) seal operations in 1000017us (4993915.1 ops/sec): 79.9 MB/s
Did 1389000 AES-128-GCM (1350 bytes) seal operations in 1000073us (1388898.6 ops/sec): 1875.0 MB/s
Did 319000 AES-128-GCM (8192 bytes) seal operations in 1000101us (318967.8 ops/sec): 2613.0 MB/s
Did 4668000 AES-256-GCM (16 bytes) seal operations in 1000149us (4667304.6 ops/sec): 74.7 MB/s
Did 1202000 AES-256-GCM (1350 bytes) seal operations in 1000646us (1201224.0 ops/sec): 1621.7 MB/s
Did 269000 AES-256-GCM (8192 bytes) seal operations in 1002804us (268247.8 ops/sec): 2197.5 MB/s
Change-Id: Id848562bd4e1aa79a4683012501dfa5e6c08cfcc
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/11262
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Change-Id: I49cab08b085dde187e9b1aaaee0e5aa44595f8b7
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/11280
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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
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/11241
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Commit-Queue: Adam Langley <agl@google.com>
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The high-level documentation for CBB describes using CBB_flush when a
child goes out of scope, but the function level documentation for
CBB_flush is less clear that CBB_flush will result in the CBB being
safe to use after the children go out of scope.
Change-Id: I58bf9e59a87d2be31a969097455aeeae6381efb3
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/11261
Reviewed-by: David Benjamin <davidben@google.com>
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
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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
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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
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wpa_supplicant in AOSP has now been updated, so these all can go. We're
just left with the AES keywrap business.
Change-Id: Ie4c3e08902a2a1f9b43e1907116c7d85791ad5e9
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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
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On 64-bit systems the SSL structure is 1/16th padding. This change
reorders some fields and changes one to a bitfield in order to reduce
the memory usage a little.
Change-Id: Id7626a44d22652254717d544bdc2e08f1b0d705f
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Android currently implements this manually (see NativeBN_putULongInt) by
reaching into BIGNUM's internals. BN_ULONG is a somewhat unfortunate API
anyway as the size is platform-dependent, so add a platform-independent
way to do this.
The other things Android needs are going to need more work, but this
one's easy.
BUG=97
Change-Id: I4af4dc29f9845bdce0f0663c379b4b5d3e1dc46e
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Code acting generically on an EVP_AEAD_CTX may wish to get at the
underlying EVP_AEAD.
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Conscrypt uses these types. Note that BORINGSSL_MAKE_STACK_DELETER
requires DECLARE_STACK_OF to work. Otherwise the compiler gives some
really confusing error.
Change-Id: I8d194067ea6450937e4a8fcb4acbbf98a2550bce
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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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This function (actually a macro in OpenSSL) is used by several projects
(e.g. OpenResty, OpenVPN, ...) so it can useuful to provide it for
compatibility.
However, depending on the semantics of the BIO type (e.g. BIO_pair), the
return value can be meaningless, which might explain why it was removed.
Change-Id: I0e432c92222c267eb994d32b0bc28e999c4b40a7
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The (rather long...) preamble to aead.h still said we allowed this.
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The compiler complains about:
error: explicit specialization of
'bssl::internal::Deleter<evp_pkey_st>' after instantiation
This is because, although the deleter's operator() is not instantiated
without emitting std::unique_ptr's destructor, the deleter itself *is*.
Deleters are allowed to have non-zero size, so a std::unique_ptr
actually embeds a copy of the deleter, so it needs the size of the
deleter.
As with all problems in computer science, we fix this with a layer of
indirection. Instead of specializing the deleter, we specialize
bssl::internal::DeleterImpl which, when specialized, has a static method
Free. That is only instantiated inside
bssl::internal::Deleter::operator(), giving us the desired properties.
(Did I mention forward decls are terrible? I wish people wouldn't want
them so much.)
Also appease clang-format.
Change-Id: I9a07b2fd13e8bdfbd204e225ac72c52d20a397dc
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It lacks std::unique_ptr, despite some consumers using it with C++11 in
the compiler enabled.
Change-Id: Icc79ac4f2385440b36aa6b01b1477abcfa8a9388
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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: I431c6e5b8f7de4663ba3db52f6fe0062caaf88ba
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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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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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Somehow I didn't notice these used i2d_ASN1_bytes and
d2i_ASN1_type_bytes when removing those. Fortunately the macros are also
removable so drop them too.
Change-Id: I2a7b198eab2d3811e5ced1f347597185b4697f8d
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We may need to implement high tag number form someday. CBS_get_asn1 has
an unsigned output to allow for this, but CBB_add_asn1 takes a uint8_t
(I think this might be my fault). Fix that which also fixes a
-Wconversion warning.
Simply leaving room in tag representation will still cause troubles
because the class and constructed bits overlap with bits for tag numbers
above 31. Probably the cleanest option would be to shift them to the top
3 bits of a u32 and thus not quite match the DER representation. Then
CBS_get_asn1 and CBB_add_asn1 will internally munge that into the DER
representation and consumers may continue to write things like:
tag_number | CBS_ASN1_CONTEXT_SPECIFIC
I haven't done that here, but in preparation for that, document that
consumers need to use the values and should refrain from assuming the
correspond to DER.
Change-Id: Ibc76e51f0bc3b843e48e89adddfe2eaba4843d12
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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
Change-Id: I75b02fad4059e6aa46c3b05183a07d72880711b3
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Chromium has switched to better APIs.
Change-Id: I26209b3a03c6a0db1ddce2f1fc99c8750cf6e56a
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Having two copies of this is confusing. This field is inherently tied to
the certificate chain, which lives on SSL_SESSION, so this should live
there too. This also wasn't getting reset correctly on SSL_clear, but
this is now resolved.
Change-Id: I22b1734a93320bb0bf0dc31faa74d77a8e1de906
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As documented by OpenSSL, it does not interact with session resumption
correctly:
https://www.openssl.org/docs/manmaster/ssl/SSL_set_verify_result.html
Sadly, netty-tcnative calls it, but we should be able to get them to
take it out because it doesn't do anything. Two of the three calls are
immediately after SSL_new. In OpenSSL and BoringSSL as of the previous
commit, this does nothing.
The final call is in verify_callback (see SSL_set_verify). This callback
is called in X509_verify_cert by way of X509_STORE_CTX_set_verify_cb.
As soon as X509_verify_cert returns, ssl->verify_result is clobbered
anyway, so it doesn't do anything.
Within OpenSSL, it's used in testdane.c. As far as I can tell, it does
not actually do a handshake and just uses this function to fake having
done one. (Regardless, we don't need to build against that.)
This is done in preparation for removing ssl->verify_result in favor of
session->verify_result.
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Change-Id: I2e1ee319bb9852b9c686f2f297c470db54f72279
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BUG=75
Change-Id: Ied864cfccbc0e68d71c55c5ab563da27b7253463
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These functions are unused. Upstream recently needed to limit recursion
depth on this function in 81f69e5b69b8e87ca5d7080ab643ebda7808542c. It
looks like deeply nested BER constructed strings could cause unbounded
stack usage. Delete the function rather than import the fix.
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These are never used internally or externally. Upstream had some
bugfixes to them recently. Delete them instead.
Change-Id: I44a6cce1dac2c459237f6d46502657702782061b
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This is unused.
Change-Id: I31bbfb88aa9b718083ecce6d1a834f27683cf002
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IS_SET and IS_SEQUENCE are extremely bad manners to #define. This also
removes the last reference to STACK_OF(OPENSSL_BLOCK).
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The server should not be allowed select a protocol that wasn't
advertised. Callers tend to not really notice and act as if some default
were chosen which is unlikely to work very well.
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If cert_cb runs asynchronously, we end up repeating a large part of very
stateful ClientHello processing. This seems to be mostly fine and there
are few users of server-side cert_cb (it's a new API in 1.0.2), but it's
a little scary.
This is also visible to external consumers because some callbacks get
called multiple times. We especially should try to avoid that as there
is no guarantee that these callbacks are idempotent and give the same
answer each time.
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Between TLS 1.2, TLS 1.3, and the early callback, we've got a lot of
ClientHello parsers. Unify everything on the early callback's parser. As
a side effect, this means we can parse a ClientHello fairly succinctly
from any function which will let us split up ClientHello states where
appropriate.
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In OpenSSL 1.1.0, this API has been renamed to gain a BN prefix. Now
that it's no longer squatting on a namespace, provide the function so
wpa_supplicant needn't carry a BoringSSL #ifdef here.
BUG=91
Change-Id: Iac8e90238c816caae6acf0e359893c14a7a970f1
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/10223
Reviewed-by: Adam Langley <agl@google.com>
Commit-Queue: Adam Langley <agl@google.com>
CQ-Verified: CQ bot account: commit-bot@chromium.org <commit-bot@chromium.org>
The name of this has been annoying me every time I've seen it over the
past couple of days. Having a flag with a negation in the name isn't
always bad, but I think this case was.
Change-Id: I5922bf4cc94eab8c59256042a9d9acb575bd40aa
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/10242
Reviewed-by: Adam Langley <agl@google.com>
Commit-Queue: Adam Langley <agl@google.com>
CQ-Verified: CQ bot account: commit-bot@chromium.org <commit-bot@chromium.org>