Newer versions of LLVM can emit this instruction. Note that there are
two different Intel instructions, both called “movsd”. The old one is an
auto-incrementing move that doesn't take any arguments. That's not the
one that is targetted in this change.
Change-Id: Id0c96e0c7fe0f6e4feb8a72b5bc0fa40878225b9
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vmovq clears the upper 128 bits of a YMM register, while movq does not.
When translating vmovq to an XMM register, we need to use vmovq in the
final move in order to keep this behaviour.
Change-Id: I81b6eee3ee6db0ea90d7c5098fc7c4ccefaf3b12
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Change-Id: I37a438b5b4b18d18756ba4aeb9f8548caa333981
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/20384
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crypto/asn1 routinely switches between int and long without overflow
checks. Fortunately, it funnels everything into a common entrypoint, so
we can uniformly bound all inputs to something which comfortably fits in
an int.
Change-Id: I340674c6b07820309dc5891024498878c82e225b
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/20366
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Thes are remnants of some old setup.
Change-Id: I09151fda9419fbe7514f2f609f70284965694bfa
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base.h pulls in all the forward declarations, so this isn't needed. We
should also remove bio.h and buf.h, but cURL seems to depend on those.
Code search suggests this one is okay though.
case:yes content:\bHMAC content:openssl/ssl.h -content:openssl/hmac.h
Change-Id: Id91686bd134649245855025940bc17f82823c734
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This is to keep Chromium building.
Bug: chromium:765754
Change-Id: I312f747e27e53590a948305f80abc240bfd2063c
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/20344
Reviewed-by: Aaron Green <aarongreen@google.com>
Reviewed-by: David Benjamin <davidben@google.com>
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Fuchsia needed to rename Magenta to Zircon. Several syscalls and status
codes changed as a result.
Change-Id: I64b5ae4537ccfb0a318452fed34040a2e8f5012e
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/20324
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Further testing suggests the behavior is slightly different than I
originally thought.
Change-Id: I3df6b3425dbb551e374159566ca969347d72a306
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/20284
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Mirrors the same functionality that is present in the client tool.
Tested by connecting the client with the server tool, verified that the
generated keylogs are identical.
Change-Id: Ic40b0ecb920383e01d7706574faf11fdb5c3fc7a
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/20244
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Windows provides _aligned_malloc, so we could provide an
|OPENSSL_aligned_malloc| in the future. However, since we're still
trying to get the zeroisation change landed everywhere, a self-contained
change seems easier until that has settled down.
Change-Id: I47bbd811a7fa1758f3c0a8a766a1058523949b7f
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The Java client implementation of the 3SHAKE mitigation incorrectly
rejects initial handshakes when all of the following are true:
1. The ClientHello offered a session.
2. The session was successfully resumed previously.
3. The server declines the session.
4. The server sends a certificate with a different SAN list than in the
previous session.
(Note the 3SHAKE mitigation is to reject certificates changes on
renegotiation, while Java's logic applies to initial handshakes as
well.)
The end result is long-lived Java clients break on some certificate
rotations. Fingerprint Java clients and decline all offered sessions.
This avoids (2) while still introducing new sessions to clear any
existing problematic sessions.
See also b/65323005.
Change-Id: Ib2b84c69b5ecba285ffb8c4d03de5626838d794e
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/20184
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In particular, this starts a new DTLS corpus.
Bug: 124
Change-Id: I0fa0b38ac1cd213cef99badde693e75ed7357ab4
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/20108
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Bug: 124
Change-Id: Iff02be9df2806572e6d3f860b448f598f85778c3
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There's a lot of duplicated code between the two. This is in preparation
for adding two more of these fuzzers, this time for DTLS.
Bug: 124
Change-Id: I8ca2a02d599e2c88e30838d04b7cf07d4221aa76
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/20106
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Found with libFuzzer.
Bug: chromium:763097
Change-Id: I806bcfc714c0629ff7f725e37f4c0045d4ec7ac6
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/20105
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This guards against the name constraints check consuming large amounts
of CPU time when certificates in the presented chain contain an
excessive number of names (specifically subject email names or subject
alternative DNS names) and/or name constraints.
Name constraints checking compares the names presented in a certificate
against the name constraints included in a certificate higher up in the
chain using two nested for loops.
Move the name constraints check so that it happens after signature
verification so peers cannot exploit this using a chain with invalid
signatures. Also impose a hard limit on the number of name constraints
check loop iterations to further mitigate the issue.
Thanks to NCC for finding this issue.
Change-Id: I112ba76fe75d1579c45291042e448850b830cbb7
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/19164
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c2i_ASN1_BIT_STRING takes length as a long but uses it as an int. Check bounds
before doing so. Previously, excessively large inputs to the function could
write a single byte outside the target buffer. (This is unreachable as
asn1_ex_c2i already uses int for the length.)
Thanks to NCC for finding this issue.
Change-Id: I7ae42214ca620d4159fa01c942153717a7647c65
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/19204
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We forgot to reset that value.
Change-Id: Ic869cb61da332983cc40223cbbdf23b455dd9766
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The new_session_cb callback should not be run if SSL_SESS_CACHE_CLIENT
is off.
Change-Id: I1ab320f33688f186b241d95c81775331a5c5b1a1
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Right now we report the per-connection value during the handshake and
the per-session value after the handshake. This also trims our tickets
slightly by removing a largely unused field from SSL_SESSION.
Putting it on SSL_HANDSHAKE would be better, but sadly a number of
bindings-type APIs expose it after the handshake.
Change-Id: I6a1383f95da9b1b141b9d6adadc05ee1e458a326
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Allocations by |OPENSSL_malloc| are prefixed with their length.
|OPENSSL_free| zeros the allocation before calling free(), eliminating
the need for a separate call to |OPENSSL_cleanse| for sensitive data.
This change will be followed up by the cleanup in
https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/c/boringssl/+/19824.
Change-Id: Ie272f07e9248d7d78af9aea81dacec0fdb7484c4
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/19544
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Change-Id: I4dea223825da4e4ab0bc789e738f470f5fe5d659
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Rather than clear them, even on failure, detect if an individual test
failed and dump the error queue there. We already do this at the GTest
level in ErrorTestEventListener, but that is too coarse-grained for the
file tests.
Change-Id: I3437626dcf3ec43f6fddd98153b0af73dbdcce84
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/19966
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We have no tests for encryption right now, and evp_tests.txt needs to
force RSA-PSS to have salt length 0, even though other salt values are
more common. This also lets us test the salt length -2 silliness.
Change-Id: I30f52d36c38732c9b63a02c66ada1d08488417d4
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/19965
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We do not expose EVP_PKEY_CTX_ctrl, so we can freely change the
semantics of EVP_PKEY_CTRL_RSA_OAEP_LABEL. That means we can pass in an
actual size_t rather than an int.
Not that anyone is actually going to exceed an INT_MAX-length RSA-OAEP
label.
Change-Id: Ifc4eb296ff9088c8815f4f8cd88100a407e4d969
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It was pointed out that we have no test coverage of this. Fix this. Test
vector generated using Go's implementation.
Change-Id: Iddbc50d3b422e853f8afd50117492f4666a47373
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By resolving Channel ID earlier, we can take advantage of
flight-by-flight writes.
Change-Id: I31265bda3390eb1faec976ac13d7a01ba5f6dd5f
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This fixes a regression in Conscrypt added by
https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/19144. SSL_get_session
otherwise attempts to return hs->new_session, but that has been released
at this point.
Change-Id: I55b41cbefb65b3ae3cfbfad72f6338bd66db3341
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/19904
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For historical reasons, TLS allows ServerHellos (and ClientHellos)
without extensions to omit the extensions fields entirely.
https://github.com/openssl/openssl/pull/4296 reports this is even
necessary for compatibility with extension-less clients. We continue to
do so, but add a test for it anyway.
Change-Id: I63c2e3a5f298674eb21952fca6914dad07d7c245
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That's the last of it!
Change-Id: I93d1f5ab7e95b2ad105c34b24297a0bf77625263
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ctx->cached_x509_client_CA needs to be protected under a lock since
SSL_CTX_get_client_CA_list is a logically const operation. The fallback
in SSL_get_client_CA_list was not using this lock.
Change-Id: I2431218492d1a853cc1a59c0678b0b50cd9beab2
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