Update-Note: If not explicitly configured to use tls13_all, callers that enable
TLS 1.3 will now only enable the final standard version.
Change-Id: Ifcfc65a9d8782c983df6e002925e8f77f45b6e53
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/31384
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The client downgrade detection tests were not asserting on the error (would
have caught the missing error string). Additionally, Downgrade-FalseStart-Draft
isn't testing what it's supposed to; it doesn't actually configure a draft
version or anything. Fix that and have it use ALPN rather than NPN, to match
the test above.
Change-Id: I0b759385641aa00994a912303a6f5bd65522b4bb
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/31204
Reviewed-by: Steven Valdez <svaldez@google.com>
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Change-Id: I2d1671a4f21a602191fd0c9b932244a376ac5713
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/31104
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The anti-downgrade signal is being implemented in a follow-up change.
Change-Id: I5ea3ff429ed1389a3577026588fef3660d2d0615
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Works in the 1.3 and 1.2 client handshakes, not implemented on the
server for now.
Creates an SSL_CTX option to reverify the server certificate on session
resumption. Reverification only runs the client's certificate verify callback.
Adds new states to the client handshakes: state_reverify_server_certificate in
TLS 1.2, and state_server_certificate_reverify in TLS 1.3.
Adds a negative test to make sure that by default we don't verify the
certificate on resumption, and positive tests that make sure we do when the
new option is set.
Change-Id: I3a47ff3eacb3099df4db4c5bc57f7c801ceea8f1
Bug: chromium:347402
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/29984
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In fuzzing builds, session resumptions fail if the PRNG behaves the
same as in the initial session. Not sure of the reason, but a kick to
the PRNG fixes the problem and doesn't compromise determinism, so
... *shrug*?
Change-Id: I8181d98fdff16ae82255e9cda33ce5c4c40b5399
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This should hopefully fix a build failure on the fuzzers.
Change-Id: If8db8dee768a83538cf37a65ec23c3f68f2be6a2
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The runner currently expects split handshake tests to work is GOOS is
"linux", but that includes Android, which the shim doesn't support.
Rather than try to align these two conditions, have the runner ask the
shim whether it supports split handshakes or not.
Change-Id: I7bea0d94142c4b6ee42b8f54c67b8611da93feb3
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/30204
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The new binary, called |handshaker|, allows split-handshakes to be
tested using shim and handshaker binaries built at different
revisions.
The shim now proxies traffic to the handshaker during the split
handshake. The handoff and handback steps serialize additional state
about the test being performed, and its results.
The proxy and handshaker make heavy use of Unix-isms, and so
split-handshake tests are now restricted to Linux.
Change-Id: I048f0540c3978a31b3e573e00da17caf41a8059e
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/29348
Reviewed-by: Adam Langley <agl@google.com>
rather than twice, with the second call overriding the first.
Change-Id: Ieb139928edcbe75f1d2e7c2c52c46950d6343a6c
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This helps with creating a separate binary to perform split
handshakes, in that the test state must be communicated to, and
retrieved from, the handshaker binary using a socket.
Change-Id: I9d70a9bb3d97dd339aab4f51c6de75f71e4fe72d
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Callers who use SSL_get0_certificate_types today will find an empty list
in TLS 1.3, which removed it. To provide feature parity, add an accessor
for the signature algorithms list. SSL_get_signature_algorithm_key_type
can be used to map it to a key type.
"Peer signature algorithms" was already taken in the public API by
SSL_get_peer_signature_algorithm to refer to which the peer selected, so
I named this matching SSL_CTX_set_verify_algorithm_prefs.
Change-Id: I12d411d7350e744ed9f88c610df48e0d9fc13256
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This makes the shim code read more naturally, in that the split-
handshake special case now lives in its own file.
This helps with creating a separate binary to perform split
handshakes.
Change-Id: I7970a8f368417791d18d4d44eeb379ef4b46c960
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/29347
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Commit-Queue: Adam Langley <agl@google.com>
Change-Id: Id7f5ef9932c4c491bd15085e3c604ebfcf259b7c
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/29665
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In f2bc5f4 davidben pointed out that this function seems unnecessary
in my desired end-state. In fact, I think it may have been
unnecessary since 56986f90. (This was easier to miss at the time,
since at the time the function was part of MoveExData(), having not
yet been factored out.)
Change-Id: Ia9b4a909c93cb595666bcf7356a9f9a085901455
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/29604
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This doesn't give them a destructor yet, just shifts things around. In
doing so, it reveals that we inconsistently allowed internal code, but
not external code, to call functions like bssl::SSL_CTX_set_handoff_mode
without a namespace because of ADL. External code doesn't get to do
this because it doesn't see that ssl_ctx_st has a base class in
namespace bssl.
Change-Id: I2ab3b00fff2d6369e850606eed63017e4f8cf8c4
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/29588
Reviewed-by: Adam Langley <agl@google.com>
It's 2018, but passing STL objects across the API boundary turns out to
still be more bother than it's worth. Since we're dropping UniquePtr in
the API anyway, go the whole way and make it a plain-C API.
Change-Id: Ic0202012e5d81afe62d71b3fb57e6a27a8f63c65
Update-note: this will need corresponding changes to the internal use of SSL_CTX_add_cert_compression_alg.
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/29564
Reviewed-by: David Benjamin <davidben@google.com>
To wit, |RetryAsync| and |CheckIdempotentError|.
This helps with creating a separate binary to perform split
handshakes.
Separate handshake utilities
Change-Id: I81d0bc38f58e7e1a92b58bf09407452b345213b4
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This makes |TestState| and |TestConfig| accessible outside
bssl_shim.cc, as well as the functions SetupCtx() and NewSSL(), which
become methods on |TestConfig|. A whole mess of callbacks move in
order to support this change.
Along the way, some bits of global state are moved (e.g. the global
test clock) and made self-initializing.
This helps with creating a separate binary to perform split
handshakes.
Change-Id: I39b00a1819074882353f5f04ed01312916f3cccb
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This partitions the session ID space of the internal cache by version,
which is nominally something we want, but we must check the version
externally anyway for both tickets and external session cache. That
makes this measure redundant. (Servers generate session IDs and 2^256 is
huge, so there would never accidentally be a collision.)
This cuts down on the "key" in the internal session cache, which will
simplify adding something like an lh_SSL_SESSION_retrieve_key function.
(LHASH is currently lax about keys because it can freely stack-allocate
partially-initialized structs. C++ is a bit more finicky about this.)
Change-Id: I656fd9dbf023dccb163d2e8049eff8f1f9a0e21b
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/29585
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We have generic -on-resume prefixes now. This avoids the global counter.
Change-Id: I7596ed3273e826b744d8545f7ed2bdd5e9190958
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/29594
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bssl::UniquePtr and FOO_up_ref do not play well together. Add a helper
to simplify this. This allows us to write things like:
foo->cert = UpRef(bar->cert);
instead of:
if (bar->cert) {
X509_up_ref(bar->cert.get());
}
foo->cert.reset(bar->cert.get());
This also plays well with PushToStack. To append something to a stack
while taking a reference, it's just:
PushToStack(certs, UpRef(cert))
Change-Id: I99ae8de22b837588a2d8ffb58f86edc1d03ed46a
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This helps with creating a separate binary to perform split
handshakes.
Change-Id: Ie4bab40bebf39e79a90d45fabb566b7ce90945bb
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This was changed in draft-ietf-quic-tls-13 to use a codepoint from the
reserved range.
Change-Id: Ia3cda249a3f37bc244d5c8a7765ec34a5708c9ae
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/29464
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Update-Note: SSL_CTX_set_min_proto_version(SSL3_VERSION) now fails.
SSL_OP_NO_SSLv3 is now zero. Internal SSL3-specific "AEAD"s are gone.
Change-Id: I34edb160be40a5eea3e2e0fdea562c6e2adda229
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/29444
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Update-Note: This tweaks the SSL_shutdown behavior. OpenSSL's original
SSL_shutdown behavior was an incoherent mix of discarding the record and
rejecting it (it would return SSL_ERROR_SYSCALL but retrying the
operation would discard it). SSLeay appears to have intended to discard
it, so we previously "fixed" it actually discard.
However, this behavior is somewhat bizarre and means we skip over
unbounded data, which we typically try to avoid. If you are trying to
cleanly shutdown the TLS portion of your protocol, surely it is at a
point where additional data is a syntax error. I suspect I originally
did not realize that, because the discarded record did not properly
continue the loop, SSL_shutdown would appear as if it rejected the data,
and so it's unlikely anyone was relying on that behavior.
Discussion in https://github.com/openssl/openssl/pull/6340 suggests
(some of) upstream also prefers rejecting.
Change-Id: Icde419049306ed17eb06ce1a7e1ff587901166f3
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This change adds server-side support for compressed certificates.
(Although some definitions for client-side support are included in the
headers, there's no code behind them yet.)
Change-Id: I0f98abf0b782b7337ddd014c58e19e6b8cc5a3c2
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/27964
Reviewed-by: David Benjamin <davidben@google.com>
We have a successful TLS 1.3 deployment, in spite of non-compliant
middleboxes everywhere, so now let's get this optimization in. It would
have been nice to test with this from the beginning, but sadly we forgot
about it. Ah well. This shaves 63 bytes off the server's first flight,
and then another 21 bytes off the pair of NewSessionTickets.
So we'll more easily notice in case of anything catastrophic, tie this
behavior to draft 28.
Update-Note: This slightly tweaks our draft-28 behavior.
Change-Id: I4f176a919bf7181239d6ebb31e7870f12364e0f9
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/28744
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If the callback returns an empty ALPN, we forget we negotiated ALPN at
all (bssl::Array does not distinguish null and empty). Empty ALPN
protocols are forbidden anyway, so reject these ahead of time.
Change-Id: I42f1fc4c843bc865e23fb2a2e5d57424b569ee99
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/28546
Reviewed-by: Adam Langley <agl@google.com>
It's conditioned in OpenSSL on client offer, not server accept.
Change-Id: Iae5483a33d9365258446ce0ae34132aeb4a92c66
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/28545
Reviewed-by: Adam Langley <agl@google.com>
Previously, we'd omitted OpenSSL's OCSP APIs because they depend on a
complex OCSP mechanism and encourage the the unreliable server behavior
that hampers using OCSP stapling to fix revocation today. (OCSP
responses should not be fetched on-demand on a callback. They should be
managed like other server credentials and refreshed eagerly, so
temporary CA outage does not translate to loss of OCSP.)
But most of the APIs are byte-oriented anyway, so they're easy to
support. Intentionally omit the one that takes a bunch of OCSP_RESPIDs.
The callback is benign on the client (an artifact of OpenSSL reading
OCSP and verifying certificates in the wrong order). On the server, it
encourages unreliability, but pyOpenSSL/cryptography.io depends on this.
Dcument that this is only for compatibility with legacy software.
Also tweak a few things for compatilibility. cryptography.io expects
SSL_CTX_set_read_ahead to return something, SSL_get_server_tmp_key's
signature was wrong, and cryptography.io tries to redefine
SSL_get_server_tmp_key if SSL_CTRL_GET_SERVER_TMP_KEY is missing.
Change-Id: I2f99711783456bfb7324e9ad972510be8a95e845
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/28404
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Callers should not mutate these.
Update-Note: I believe I've fixed up everything. If I missed one, the
fix should be straightforward.
Change-Id: Ifbce4961204822f57502a0de33aaa5a2a08b026d
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/28266
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Update-Note: Enabling TLS 1.3 now enables both draft-23 and draft-28
by default, in preparation for cycling all to draft-28.
Change-Id: I9405f39081f2e5f7049aaae8a9c85399f21df047
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/28304
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Hopefully this is the last of it before we can hide the struct. We're
missing peer_sha256 accessors, and some test wants to mutate the ticket
in a test client.
Change-Id: I1a30fcc0a1e866d42acbc07a776014c9257f7c86
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/28268
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We forgot to do this in our original implementation on general ecosystem
grounds. It's also mandated starting draft-26.
Just to avoid unnecessary turbulence, since draft-23 is doomed to die
anyway, condition this on our draft-28 implementation. (We don't support
24 through 27.)
We'd actually checked this already on the Go side, but the spec wants a
different alert.
Change-Id: I0014cda03d7129df0b48de077e45f8ae9fd16976
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This is done by adding two new tagged data types to the shim's
transcript: one for the serialized handoff, and another for the
serialized handback.
Then, the handshake driver in |TLSFuzzer| is modified to be able to
drive a handoff+handback sequence in the same way as was done for
testing: by swapping |BIO|s into additional |SSL| objects. (If a
particular transcript does not contain a serialized handoff, this is a
no-op.)
Change-Id: Iab23e4dc27959ffd3d444adc41d40a4274e83653
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All CBC ciphers in TLS are broken and insecure. TLS 1.2 introduced
AEAD-based ciphers which avoid their many problems. It also introduced
new CBC ciphers based on HMAC-SHA256 and HMAC-SHA384 that share the same
flaws as the original HMAC-SHA1 ones. These serve no purpose. Old
clients don't support them, they have the highest overhead of all TLS
ciphers, and new clients can use AEADs anyway.
Remove them from libssl. This is the smaller, more easily reverted
portion of the removal. If it survives a week or so, we can unwind a lot
more code elsewhere in libcrypto. This removal will allow us to clear
some indirect calls from crypto/cipher_extra/tls_cbc.c, aligning with
the recommendations here:
https://github.com/HACS-workshop/spectre-mitigations/blob/master/crypto_guidelines.md#2-avoid-indirect-branches-in-constant-time-code
Update-Note: The following cipher suites are removed:
- TLS_RSA_WITH_AES_128_CBC_SHA256
- TLS_RSA_WITH_AES_256_CBC_SHA256
- TLS_ECDHE_ECDSA_WITH_AES_128_CBC_SHA256
- TLS_ECDHE_ECDSA_WITH_AES_256_CBC_SHA384
- TLS_ECDHE_RSA_WITH_AES_128_CBC_SHA256
- TLS_ECDHE_RSA_WITH_AES_256_CBC_SHA384
Change-Id: I7ade0fc1fa2464626560d156659893899aab6f77
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/27944
Reviewed-by: Adam Langley <agl@google.com>
Chrome needs to support renegotiation at TLS 1.2 + HTTP/1.1, but we're
free to shed the handshake configuration at TLS 1.3 or HTTP/2.
Rather than making config shedding implicitly disable renegotiation,
make the actual shedding dependent on a combination of the two settings.
If config shedding is enabled, but so is renegotiation (including
whether we are a client, etc.), leave the config around. If the
renegotiation setting gets disabled again after the handshake,
re-evaluate and shed the config then.
Bug: 123
Change-Id: Ie833f413b3f15b8f0ede617991e3fef239d4a323
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|SSL_CONFIG| is a container for bits of configuration that are
unneeded after the handshake completes. By default it is retained for
the life of the |SSL|, but it may be shed at the caller's option by
calling SSL_set_shed_handshake_config(). This is incompatible with
renegotiation, and with SSL_clear().
|SSL_CONFIG| is reachable by |ssl->config| and by |hs->config|. The
latter is always non-NULL. To avoid null checks, I've changed the
signature of a number of functions from |SSL*| arguments to
|SSL_HANDSHAKE*| arguments.
When configuration has been shed, setters that touch |SSL_CONFIG|
return an error value if that is possible. Setters that return |void|
do nothing.
Getters that request |SSL_CONFIG| values will fail with an |assert| if
the configuration has been shed. When asserts are compiled out, they
will return an error value.
The aim of this commit is to simplify analysis of split-handshakes by
making it obvious that some bits of state have no effects beyond the
handshake. It also cuts down on memory usage.
Of note: |SSL_CTX| is still reachable after the configuration has been
shed, and a couple things need to be retained only for the sake of
post-handshake hooks. Perhaps these can be fixed in time.
Change-Id: Idf09642e0518945b81a1e9fcd7331cc9cf7cc2d6
Bug: 123
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/27644
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This is prefactoring for a coming change to the shim that will write
handoff and handback messages (which are serialized SSLConnection
objects) to the transcript.
This breaks the slightly tenuous ordering between the runner and the
shim. Fix the runner to wait until the shim has exited before
appending the transcript.
Change-Id: Iae34d28ec1addfe3ec4f3c77008248fe5530687c
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/27184
Reviewed-by: David Benjamin <davidben@google.com>
Commit-Queue: David Benjamin <davidben@google.com>
CQ-Verified: CQ bot account: commit-bot@chromium.org <commit-bot@chromium.org>
I don't think this lock is actually needed. If the process exited by the
time we call shim.Process.Kill(), then the test ultimately finished. If
not, wait() will return that the process died by a signal.
Change-Id: I668a86583aba16fd00e0cd05071acc13059a2c42
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/27325
Reviewed-by: Adam Langley <agl@google.com>
This schism came up in passing again, and I realized we never added a
TLS-level test for this. Fix that.
Change-Id: I10f910bb5a975d6b3b73d99e7412ade35654fddb
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/27224
Commit-Queue: David Benjamin <davidben@google.com>
CQ-Verified: CQ bot account: commit-bot@chromium.org <commit-bot@chromium.org>
Reviewed-by: Adam Langley <agl@google.com>