Zero only has one allowed square root, not two.
Change-Id: I1dbd2137a7011d2f327b271b267099771e5499c3
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This is fine because TLS PRFs only go up to SHA-384, but since
SSL_SESSION::master_key is sized to 48, not EVP_MAX_MD_SIZE, this should
explicitly check the bounds.
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This aligns with ec_test which has a ForEachCurve helper and avoids
writing these loops all the time. As a bonus, these tests start working
in DTLS now.
Change-Id: I613fc08b641ddc12a819d8a1268a1e6a29043663
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This change causes SSL_CTX_set_signed_cert_timestamp_list to check the
SCT list for shallow validity before allowing it to be set.
Change-Id: Ib8a1fe185224ff02ed4ce53a0109e60d934e96b3
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(Otherwise we end up touching potentially unwound stack.)
I looked into why our builders didn't catch this and it appears that, at
least with Clang 3.7, ASAN doesn't notice this. Perhaps Clang at that
version is being lazy about destructing the scoped CBB and so doesn't
actually go wrong.
Change-Id: Ia0f73e7eb662676439f024805fc8287a4e991ce0
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It is not called outside of t1_enc.c.
Change-Id: Ifd9d109eeb432e931361ebdf456243c490b93ecf
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This prevents a compiler warning from breaking ppc64le build.
Change-Id: I6752109bd02c6d078e656f89327093f8fb13a125
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Since the printed format for errors uses colons to separate different
parts of the error message, this was confusing.
Change-Id: I4742becec2bcb56ad8dc2fdb9a3bb23e4452d1b2
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Bazel builds tests as shared libraries and the new p256-x86_64_test
depends on accessing unexported symbols. Thus we need to define
BORINGSSL_SHARED_LIBRARY when building tests.
Change-Id: I1270c69ac9d1bcf6baa05ef6666078bd368d80cf
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This change contains a C implementation of SHA-1 for POWER using
AltiVec. It is almost as fast as the scalar-only assembly implementation
for POWER/POWERPC family in OpenSSL but it is easier to maintain and it
allows error checking with tools like ASAN.
This is tested only for ppc64le. It may nor may not work for other
platforms in the POWER/POWERPC familiy.
Before:
SHA-1 @ 16 bytes: ~30 MB/s
SHA-1 @ 8K: ~140 MB/s
After:
SHA-1 @ 16 bytes: ~70 MB/s
SHA-1 @ 8K: ~480 MB/s
Change-Id: I790352e86d9c0cc4e1e57d11c5a0aa5b0780ca6b
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We do not change ALPN on renego, so the value should carry over and not
be cleared.
Change-Id: Id54a083945542b4457d9c2787f0fe7c30239b76f
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If the function fails, it's an internal_error.
Change-Id: I4b7cf7a6ca2527f04b708303ab1bc71df762b55b
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It doesn't need to be exported out of t1_lib.c.
Change-Id: I000493e1e330457051da1719ca9f8152a4ff845a
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Otherwise the run_tests target sometimes gets confused.
Change-Id: If49e945bf5137c68db4927ab0f9845d25be63bac
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Previously the option to retain only the SHA-256 hash of client
certificates could only be set at the |SSL_CTX| level. This change makes
|SSL| objects inherit the setting from the |SSL_CTX|, but allows it to
be overridden on a per-|SSL| basis.
Change-Id: Id435934af3d425d5f008d2f3b9751d1d0884ee55
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The former has always worked. The latter is new to the revised
processing order.
Change-Id: I993d29ccaca091725524847695df4d1944b609cf
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This changes our resumption strategy. Before, we would negotiate ciphers
only on fresh handshakes. On resumption, we would blindly use whatever
was in the session.
Instead, evaluate cipher suite preferences on every handshake.
Resumption requires that the saved cipher suite match the one that would
have been negotiated anyway. If client or server preferences changed
sufficiently, we decline the session.
This is much easier to reason about (we always pick the best cipher
suite), simpler, and avoids getting stuck under old preferences if
tickets are continuously renewed. Notably, although TLS 1.2 ticket
renewal does not work in practice, TLS 1.3 will renew tickets like
there's no tomorrow.
It also means we don't need dedicated code to avoid resuming a cipher
which has since been disabled. (That dedicated code was a little odd
anyway since the mask_k, etc., checks didn't occur. When cert_cb was
skipped on resumption, one could resume without ever configuring a
certificate! So we couldn't know whether to mask off RSA or ECDSA cipher
suites.)
Add tests which assert on this new arrangement.
BUG=116
Change-Id: Id40d851ccd87e06c46c6ec272527fd8ece8abfc6
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This is in preparation for determining the cipher suite (which, in TLS
1.2, requires the certificate be known) before resumption.
Note this has caller-visible effects:
- cert_cb is now called whether resumption occurs or not. Our only
consumer which uses this as a server is Node which will require a
patch to fix up their mucking about with SSL_get_session. (But the
patch should be quite upstreamable. More 1.1.0-compatible and
generally saner.)
- cert_cb is now called before new_session_cb and dos_protection_cb.
BUG=116
Change-Id: I6cc745757f63281fad714d4548f23880570204b0
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This simplifies a little code around EMS and PSK KE modes, but requires
tweaking the SNI code.
The extensions that are more tightly integrated with the handshake are
still processed inline for now. It does, however, require an extra state
in 1.2 so the asynchronous session callback does not cause extensions to
be processed twice. Tweak a test enforce this.
This and a follow-up to move cert_cb before resumption are done in
preparation for resolving the cipher suite before resumption and only
resuming on match.
Note this has caller-visible effects:
- The legacy SNI callback happens before resumption.
- The ALPN callback happens before resumption.
- Custom extension ClientHello parsing callbacks also cannot depend on
resumption state.
- The DoS protection callback now runs after all the extension callbacks
as it is documented to be called after the resumption decision.
BUG=116
Change-Id: I1281a3b61789b95c370314aaed4f04c1babbc65f
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A BN_ULONG[P256_LIMBS] can't represent a negative number and
bn_set_words won't produce one. We only need to compare against P.
Change-Id: I7bd1c9e8c162751637459f23f3cfc56884d85864
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RT#4625
(Imported from upstream's e3057a57caf4274ea1fb074518e4714059dfcabf.)
Add a test in ec_test to cover the ecp_nistz256_points_mul change. Also
revise the low-level infinity tests to cover the changes in
ecp_nistz256_point_add. Upstream's 'infty' logic was also cleaned up to
be simpler and take advantage of the only cases where |p| is infinity.
Change-Id: Ie22de834bf79ecb6191e824ad9fc1bd6f9681b8b
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As a client, we must tolerate this to avoid interoperability failures
with allowed server behaviors.
BUG=117
Change-Id: I9c40a2a048282e2e63ab5ee1d40773fc2eda110a
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Draft 18 sadly loosens the requirements to only requiring the PRF hash
stay fixed.
BUG=117
Change-Id: Ic94d53fd9cabaee611fcf36b0071558075e10728
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This is generally much cleaner and makes it possible to implement the
more lax cipher matching in draft 18.
BUG=117
Change-Id: I595d7619d60bc92e598d75b43945286323c0b72b
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This is a no-op because all affected codepaths are either unreachable or
are fine because ssl_hs_error (intentionally, since C doesn't help us
any) aligns with zero. Still, fix these.
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It doesn't particular matter, but AcceptAnySession should only skip the
things that would cause us to note accept a ticket. ExpectTicketAge is
an assertion, not part of protocol logic. Accordingly, fix the text.
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The version check should run if AcceptAnyVersion is *not* set.
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When debugging a flaky test, it's useful to be able to run a given test
over and over.
Change-Id: I1a7b38792215550b242eb8238214d873d41becb6
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The draft 18 implementation did not compute scts_requested correctly. As
a result, it always believed SCTs were requested. Fix this and add tests
for unsolicited OCSP responses and SCTs at all versions.
Thanks to Daniel Hirche for the report.
Change-Id: Ifc59c5c4d7edba5703fa485c6c7a4055b15954b4
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Thanks to Eric Rescorla for catching this.
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Having that logic in two different places is a nuisance when we go to
add new checks like resumption stuff. Along the way, this adds missing
tests for the ClientHello cipher/session consistency check. (We'll
eventually get it for free once the cipher/resumption change is
unblocked, but get this working in the meantime.)
This also fixes a bug where the session validity checks happened in the
wrong order relative to whether tickets_supported or renew_ticket was
looked at. Fix that by lifting that logic closer to the handshake.
Change-Id: I3f4b59cfe01064f9125277dc5834e62a36e64aae
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We were using a fully-qualified name for nearly everything anyway.
Change-Id: Ia32c68975ed4126feeab7b420f12b726ad6b89b3
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The other field operations have an explicit _mont suffix to denote their
inputs and outputs are in the Montgomery domain, aside from
ecp_nistz256_neg which works either way. Do the same here.
Change-Id: I63741adaeba8140e29fb0b45dff72273e231add7
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The file is util-64.c in BoringSSL.
Change-Id: I51891103254ae1541ea4c30f92c41d5d47c2ba55
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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
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Addition was not preserving inputs' property of being fully reduced.
Thanks to Brian Smith for reporting this.
(Imported from upstream's b62b2454fadfccaf5e055a1810d72174c2633b8f and
d3034d31e7c04b334dd245504dd4f56e513ca115.)
See also this thread.
https://mta.openssl.org/pipermail/openssl-dev/2016-August/008179.html
Change-Id: I3731f949e2e2ef539dec656c58f1820cc09a56a6
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This was removed a while ago. As of -18, the early data indication
extension is just a boolean.
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We missed that the TLS 1.3 code was inconsistent with the TLS 1.2 code.
Only on the server did we push an error code. But consistency between
client and server is probably worthwhile so, fix the 1.2 code to match
for now.
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This is getting to be a nuisance to do by hand.
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Change-Id: I0767cd4801924170ce13b8143a9586485b8f78af
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Change-Id: I07c4b67206440d169b314f24e1b3c1c697dda24f
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TLS 1.3 adds a number of places with extensions blocks that don't easily
fit into our ClientHello/EncryptedExtensions callbacks. Between
HelloRetryRequest, ServerHello, draft 18 going nuts with Certificate,
and NewSessionTicket when we do 0-RTT, this passes the "abstract things
that are repeated three times" sniff test.
For now, it rejects unknown extensions, but it will probably grow an
allow_unknown parameter for NewSessionTicket.
This involves disabling some MSVC warnings, but they're invalid as of
C99 which we otherwise require. See
https://connect.microsoft.com/VisualStudio/feedback/details/1230248/remove-c99-related-warnings-or-make-them-off-by-default
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BUG=112
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