Reduce the amount of boilerplate needed to add more of these. Also tidy
things up a little.
Change-Id: I90ea7f70dba5a2b38a1fb716faff97eb4f6afafc
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/12687
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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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This was done by running:
./fuzz/cert -merge=1 ../fuzz/cert_corpus ~/openssl/fuzz/corpora/x509
I bumped the max_len while doing so because some of those are rather
large.
Change-Id: Ic2caa09d5ff9ab05b46363940a91a03f270cbad8
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/12682
Reviewed-by: Adam Langley <agl@google.com>
The error value is -2, but at this point ret has already been set to
some running answer and must be reset to -2.
(This is unreachable. BN_rshift only fails on caller or malloc error,
and it doesn't need to malloc when running in-place.)
Change-Id: I33930da84b00d1906bdee9d09b9504ea8121fac4
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/12681
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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
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/12680
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This is to free up the hs->state name for the upper-level handshake
state.
Change-Id: I1183a329f698c56911f3879a91809edad5b5e94e
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/12695
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Change-Id: Ib9df4e8f797c9af3362354cc6716171fd65600de
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Change-Id: Iaac633616a54ba1ed04c14e4778865c169a68621
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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
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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.
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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Prior to 87eab4902d, due to some
confusions between configuration and connection state, SSL_clear had the
side effect of offering the previously established session on the new
connection.
wpa_supplicant relies on this behavior, so restore it for TLS 1.2 and
below and add a test. (This behavior is largely incompatible with TLS
1.3's post-handshake tickets, so it won't work in 1.3. It'll act as if
we configured an unresumable session instead.)
Change-Id: Iaee8c0afc1cb65c0ab7397435602732b901b1c2d
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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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It is impossible to have an SSL* without a corresponding method.
Change-Id: Icaf826a06aaaa2c7caf98b1e4a950f9c1d48e6bd
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/12621
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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
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These too have no reason to be called across files.
Change-Id: Iee477e71f956c2fa0d8817bf2777cb3a81e1c853
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/12585
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s3_lib.c is nearly gone. ssl_get_cipher_preferences will fall away once
we remove the version-specific cipher lists. ssl_get_algorithm_prf and
the PRF stuff in general needs some revising (it was the motivation for
all the SSL_HANDSHAKE business). I've left ssl3_new / ssl3_free alone
for now because we don't have a good separation between common TLS/DTLS
connection state and state internal to the TLS SSL_PROTOCOL_METHOD.
Leaving that alone for now as there's lower-hanging fruit.
Change-Id: Idf7989123a387938aa89b6a052161c9fff4cbfb3
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d2i_X509 will free an existing |X509*| on parse failure. Thus
|X509_parse_from_buffer| would double-free the result on error.
Change-Id: If2bca2f1e1895bc426079f6ade4b82008707888d
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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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Change-Id: I6514d68435ac4b7e2c638c7612b57bde5886bbba
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We've taken to writing bssl::UniquePtr in full, so it's not buying
us much.
Change-Id: Ia2689366cbb17282c8063608dddcc675518ec0ca
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/12628
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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
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Change-Id: Ida26e32a700c68e1899f9f6ccff73e2fa5252313
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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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Each of these functions is called only once, but they're interspersed
between s3_lib.c and ssl_lib.c.
Change-Id: Ic496e364b091fc8e01fc0653fe73c83c47f690d9
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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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The various key schedule cleanups have removed the need for this enum.
Change-Id: I3269aa19b834815926ad56b2d919e21b5e2603fe
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/12582
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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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Change-Id: I1e28ba84de59336cab432d1db3dd9c6023909081
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Change-Id: Ie46d45cdb07c692a789594e13040a1ce9d6cf83d
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The remaining direct accesses are in functions which expect to be called
in and out of the handshake. Accordingly, they are NULL-checked.
Change-Id: I07a7de6bdca7b6f8d09e22da11b8863ebf41389a
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Change-Id: I84a8ff1d717f3291403f6fc49668c84f89b910da
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Change-Id: I5ef0fe5cc3ae0d5029ae41db36e66d22d76f6158
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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 change will cause getrandom to be used in preference to
/dev/urandom when supported by the kernel.
This will also cause BoringSSL-using processes to block until the
entropy pool is initialised on systems that support getrandom(2).
Change-Id: I2d3a17891502c85884c77138ef0f3a719d7ecfe6
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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
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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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There only needs to be a single place where we do the generic
initialisation. All the processor-specific implementations can just
return early.
Change-Id: Ifd8a9c3bd7bec1ee8307aaa7bbeb9afe575e8a47
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Previously, gcm.c contained a lot of workarounds for cases where BSWAP8
wasn't defined. Rather than handle this in each place, just make it
always available.
While we're here, make these macros inline functions instead and rename
them to something less likely to collide.
Change-Id: I9f2602f8b9965c63a86b177a8a084afb8b53a253
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