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).
Change-Id: I6b509248f228c3a02308c61afbb10975573d3b16
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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.
Change-Id: Ib6388db72f05386f854d275bab762ca79e8174e6
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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.
Change-Id: I212b2325eae2cfca0fb423dace101e466c5e5d4e
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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.
Change-Id: I2359b75f80926cc7d827570cf33f93029b39e525
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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
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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
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This gets cURL building against both BoringSSL as it is and BoringSSL
with OPENSSL_VERSION_NUMBER set to 1.1.0.
BUG=91
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It was renamed to ticket_liftetime_hint in
1e6f11a7ff, which breaks Qt.
Change-Id: I9c6d3097fe96e669f06a4e0880bd4d7d82b03ba8
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Initial stab at moving contents of scoped_types.h into
include/openssl/c++ and into the |bssl| namespace.
Started with one file. Will do the remaining ones once this looks good.
Change-Id: I51e2f7c1acbe52d508f1faee7740645f91f56386
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EKR is unlikely to resolve this TODO anytime soon.
Change-Id: I2cf6b4ad4f643048d1a683d60b4b90e2b1230aae
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BN_mod_inverse_odd was always being used on 64-bit platforms and was being used
for all curves with an order of 450 bits or smaller (basically, everything but
P-521). We generally don't care much about minor differences in the speed of
verifying signatures using curves other than P-256 and P-384. It is better to
always use the same algorithm.
This also allows |bn_mod_inverse_general|, |bn_mod_inverse_no_branch|, and
|BN_mod_inverse| to be dropped from programs that can somehow avoid linking in
the RSA key generation and RSA CRT recovery code.
Change-Id: I79b94bff23d2b07d5e0c704f7d44538797f8c7a0
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This is very far from all of it, but I did some easy ones before I got
bored. Snapshot the progress until someone else wants to continue this.
BUG=22
Change-Id: I2609e9766d883a273e53e01a75a4b1d4700e2436
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Only X509_up_ref left (it's still waiting on a few external callers).
BUG=89
Change-Id: Ia2aec2bb0a944356cb1ce29f3b58a26bdb8a9977
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Inch towards OpenSSL 1.1.0 compatibility.
BUG=91
Change-Id: Ia45b6bdb5114d0891fdffdef0b5868920324ecec
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We'd gotten rid of the macros, but not the underlying asn1_GetSequence
which is unused. Sadly this doesn't quite get rid of ASN1_(const_)?CTX.
There's still some code in the rest of crypto/asn1 that uses it.
Change-Id: I2ba8708ac5b20982295fbe9c898fef8f9b635704
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We broke this to varying degrees ages ago.
This is the logic to implement the variations of rules in TLS to discard
sessions after a failed connection, where a failed connection could be
one of:
- A connection that was not cleanly shut down.
- A connection that received a fatal alert.
The first one is nonsense since close_notify does not actually work in
the real world. The second is a vaguely more plausible but...
- A stateless ticket-based server can't drop sessions anyway.
- In TLS 1.3, a client may receive many tickets over the lifetime of a
single connection. With an external session cache like ours which may,
in theory, but multithreaded, this will be a huge hassle to track.
- A client may well attempt to establish a connection and reuse the
session before we receive the fatal alert, so any application state we
hope to manage won't really work.
- An attacker can always close the connection before the fatal alert, so
whatever security policy clearing the session gave is easily
bypassable.
Implementation-wise, this has basically never worked. The
ssl_clear_bad_session logic called into SSL_CTX_remove_session which
relied on the internal session cache. (Sessions not in the internal
session cache don't get removed.) The internal session cache was only
useful for a server, where tickets prevent this mechanism from doing
anything. For a client, we since removed the internal session cache, so
nothing got removed. The API for a client also did not work as it gave
the SSL_SESSION, not the SSL, so a consumer would not know the key to
invalidate anyway.
The recent session state splitting change further broke this.
Moreover, calling into SSL_CTX_remove_session logic like that is
extremely dubious because it mutates the not_resumable flag on the
SSL_SESSION which isn't thread-safe.
Spec-wise, TLS 1.3 has downgraded the MUST to a SHOULD.
Given all that mess, just remove this code. It is no longer necessary to
call SSL_shutdown just to make session caching work.
Change-Id: Ib601937bfc5f6b40436941e1c86566906bb3165d
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We will now send tickets as a server and accept them as a
client. Correctly offering and resuming them in the handshake will be
implemented in a follow-up.
Now that we're actually processing draft 14 tickets, bump the draft
version.
Change-Id: I304320a29c4ffe564fa9c00642a4ace96ff8d871
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OpenSSL 1.1.0 added a function to tell if an SSL* is DTLS or not. This
is probably a good idea, especially since SSL_version returns
non-normalized versions.
BUG=91
Change-Id: I25c6cf08b2ebabf0c610c74691de103399f729bc
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The functions appear to try to handle negative inputs, but it isn't
clear how negative inputs are supposed to work and/or if these
functions work the way they are supposed to given negative inputs.
There seems to be no legitimate reason to pass these functions negative
inputs, so just document that negative inputs shouldn't be used. More
specifically, document that the inputs should be in the range [0, n)
where |n| is the Montgomery modulus.
Change-Id: Id8732fb89616f10e673704e6fa09d78926c402d8
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Have |bn_correct_top| fix |bn->neg| if the input is zero so that we
don't have negative zeros lying around.
Thanks to Brian Smith for noticing.
Change-Id: I91bcadebc8e353bb29c81c4367e85853886c8e4e
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BUG=59
Change-Id: If3a788ec1328226d69293996845fa1d14690bf40
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SSL_set_bio is a nightmare.
In f715c42322, we noticed that, among
other problems, SSL_set_bio's actual behavior did not match how
SSL_set_rfd was calling it due to an asymmetry in the rbio/wbio
handling. This resulted in SSL_set_fd/SSL_set_rfd calls to crash. We
decided that SSL_set_rfd's believed semantics were definitive and
changed SSL_set_bio.
Upstream, in 65e2d672548e7c4bcb28f1c5c835362830b1745b, decided that
SSL_set_bio's behavior, asymmetry and all, was definitive and that the
SSL_set_rfd crash was a bug in SSL_set_rfd. Accordingly, they switched
the fd callers to use the side-specific setters, new in 1.1.0.
Align with upstream's behavior and add tests for all of SSL_set_bio's
insanity. Also export the new side-specific setters in anticipation of
wanting to be mostly compatible with OpenSSL 1.1.0.
Change-Id: Iceac9508711f79750a3cc2ded081b2bb2cbf54d8
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A caller using EVP_Digest* which a priori knows tighter bounds on the
hash function used (perhaps because it is always a particular hash) can
assume the function will not write more bytes than the size of the hash.
The letter of the rules before vaguely[*] allowed for more than
EVP_MD_MAX_SIZE bytes written which made for some unreasonable code in
Chromium. Officially clarify this and add tests which, when paired with
valgrind and ASan prove it.
BUG=59
[*] Not really. I think it already promised the output length will be
both the number of bytes written and the size of the hash and the size
of the hash is given by what the function promises to compute. Meh.
Change-Id: I736d526e81cca30475c90897bca896293ff30278
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Change-Id: Idf9db184348140972e57b2a8fa30dc9cb8b2e0f2
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To prevent configuration/established session confusion, the handshake
session state is separated into the configured session (ssl->session)
and the newly created session (ssl->s3->new_session). Upon conclusion of
the handshake, the finalized session is stored
in (ssl->s3->established_session). During the handshake, any requests
for the session (SSL_get_session) return a non-resumable session, to
prevent resumption of a partially filled session. Sessions should only
be cached upon the completion of the full handshake, using the resulting
established_session. The semantics of accessors on the session are
maintained mid-renego.
Change-Id: I4358aecb71fce4fe14a6746c5af1416a69935078
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This finishes getting rid of ssl_read_bytes! Now we have separate
entry-points for the various cases. For now, I've kept TLS handshake
consuming records partially. When we do the BIO-less API, I expect that
will need to change, since we won't have the record buffer available.
(Instead, the ssl3_read_handshake_bytes and extend_handshake_buffer pair
will look more like the DTLS side or Go and pull the entire record into
init_buf.)
This change opts to make read_app_data drive the message to completion
in anticipation of DTLS 1.3. That hasn't been specified, but
NewSessionTicket certainly will exist. Knowing that DTLS necessarily has
interleave seems something better suited for the SSL_PROTOCOL_METHOD
internals to drive.
It needs refining, but SSL_PROTOCOL_METHOD is now actually a half-decent
abstraction boundary between the higher-level protocol logic and
DTLS/TLS-specific record-layer and message dispatchy bits.
BUG=83
Change-Id: I9b4626bb8a29d9cb30174d9e6912bb420ed45aff
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Yo dawg I herd you like blinding so I put inversion blinding in your
RSA blinding so you can randomly mask your random mask.
This improves upon the current situation where we pretend that
|BN_mod_inverse_no_branch| is constant-time, and it avoids the need to
exert a lot of effort to make a actually-constant-time modular
inversion function just for RSA blinding.
Note that if the random number generator weren't working correctly then
the blinding of the inversion wouldn't be very effective, but in that
case the RSA blinding itself would probably be completely busted, so
we're not really losing anything by relying on blinding to blind the
blinding.
Change-Id: I771100f0ad8ed3c24e80dd859ec22463ef2a194f
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This also adds a missing OPENSSL_EXPORT.
Change-Id: I6c2400246280f68f51157e959438644976b1171b
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There are many cases where we need |BN_rand_range| but with a minimum
value other than 0. |BN_rand_range_ex| provides that.
Change-Id: I564326c9206bf4e20a37414bdbce16a951c148ce
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This was only used so we knew when we had a current message to discard
and when we didn't. With init_msg being tracked better, we can use that
instead.
As part of this, switch the V2ClientHello hack to not using
reuse_message. Otherwise we have to fill in init_msg and friends in two
places.
The next change will require that we have a better handle on the "is
there a current message" boolean.
BUG=83
Change-Id: I917efacbad10806d492bbe51eda74c0779084d60
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Change-Id: I6d552d26b3d72f6fffdc4d4d9fc3b5d82fb4e8bb
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WebRTC want to be able to send a random alert. Add an API for this.
Change-Id: Id3113d68f25748729fd9e9a91dbbfa93eead12c3
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/8950
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Change-Id: I5afb917ff151a1cd19cb03152348b5e2eb774e55
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Reviewed-by: Steven Valdez <svaldez@google.com>
Reviewed-by: David Benjamin <davidben@google.com>
Alas, we will need a version fallback for TLS 1.3 again.
This deprecates SSL_MODE_SEND_FALLBACK_SCSV. Rather than supplying a
boolean, have BoringSSL be aware of the real maximum version so we can
change the TLS 1.3 anti-downgrade logic to kick in, even when
max_version is set to 1.2.
The fallback version replaces the maximum version when it is set for
almost all purposes, except for downgrade protection purposes.
BUG=chromium:630165
Change-Id: I4c841dcbc6e55a282b223dfe169ac89c83c8a01f
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It seems risky in the context of cross-signed certificates when the
same certificate might have multiple potential issuers. Also rarely
used, since chains in OpenSSL typically only employ self-signed
trust-anchors, whose self-signatures are not checked, while untrusted
certificates are generally ephemeral.
(Imported from upstream's 0e76014e584ba78ef1d6ecb4572391ef61c4fb51.)
This is in master and not 1.0.2, but having a per-certificate signature
cache when this is a function of signature and issuer seems dubious at
best. Thanks to Viktor Dukhovni for pointing this change out to me.
(And for making the original change upstream, of course.)
Change-Id: Ie692d651726f14aeba6eaab03ac918fcaedb4eeb
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/8880
Reviewed-by: Adam Langley <agl@google.com>
We try to keep the deprecated values hidden, but if we do that, we won't
be able to allocate new constants without knowing which collide.
Change-Id: I3f249639bdf8869b2c83f3efdadd98b63ed839be
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Share a bit more of it between TLS 1.2 and 1.3.
Change-Id: I43c9dbf785a3d33db1793cffb0fdbd3af075cc89
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Our CBB patterns do not make it safe to use a CBB after any operation
failed. Suppose one does:
int add_to_cbb(CBB *cbb) {
CBB child;
return CBB_add_u8(cbb, 1) &&
CBB_add_u8_length_prefixed(cbb, &child) &&
CBB_add_u8(&child, 2) &&
/* Flush |cbb| before |child| goes out of scoped. */
CBB_flush(cbb);
}
If one of the earlier operations fails, any attempt to use |cbb| (except
CBB_cleanup) would hit a memory error. Doing this would be a bug anyway,
since the CBB would be in an undefined state anyway (wrote only half my
object), but the memory error is bad manners.
Officially document that using a CBB after failure is illegal and, to
avoid the memory error, set a poison bit on the cbb_buffer_st to prevent
all future operations. In theory we could make failure +
CBB_discard_child work, but this is not very useful and would require a
more complex CBB pattern.
Change-Id: I4303ee1c326785849ce12b5f7aa8bbde6b95d2ec
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This adds the machinery for doing TLS 1.3 1RTT.
Change-Id: I736921ffe9dc6f6e64a08a836df6bb166d20f504
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/8720
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>
This is the equivalent of FragmentAcrossChangeCipherSuite for DTLS. It
is possible for us to, while receiving pre-CCS handshake messages, to
buffer up a message with sequence number meant for a post-CCS Finished.
When we then get to the new epoch and attempt to read the Finished, we
will process the buffered Finished although it was sent with the wrong
encryption.
Move ssl_set_{read,write}_state to SSL_PROTOCOL_METHOD hooks as this is
a property of the transport. Notably, read_state may fail. In DTLS
check the handshake buffer size. We could place this check in
read_change_cipher_spec, but TLS 1.3 has no ChangeCipherSpec message, so
we will need to implement this at the cipher change point anyway. (For
now, there is only an assert on the TLS side. This will be replaced with
a proper check in TLS 1.3.)
Change-Id: Ia52b0b81e7db53e9ed2d4f6d334a1cce13e93297
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/8790
Reviewed-by: Steven Valdez <svaldez@google.com>
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>
prk should be a const parameter.
Change-Id: I2369ed9f87fc3c59afc07d3b667b86aec340052e
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/8810
Reviewed-by: Steven Valdez <svaldez@google.com>
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>
It was pointed out that the equivalent values may sometimes be hard to
find.
Change-Id: I02a1790e026047b3dc2034c2f9ad75abc9e59eb7
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/8800
Reviewed-by: Adam Langley <agl@google.com>
This allows us to implement custom RSA-PSS-based keys, so the async TLS
1.3 tests can proceed. For now, both sign and sign_digest exist, so
downstreams only need to manage a small change atomically. We'll remove
sign_digest separately.
In doing so, fold all the *_complete hooks into a single complete hook
as no one who implemented two operations ever used different function
pointers for them.
While I'm here, I've bumped BORINGSSL_API_VERSION. I do not believe we
have any SSL_PRIVATE_KEY_METHOD versions who cannot update atomically,
but save a round-trip in case we do. It's free.
Change-Id: I7f031aabfb3343805deee429b9e244aed5d76aed
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/8786
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>
This makes custom private keys and EVP_PKEYs symmetric again. There is
no longer a requirement that the caller pre-filter the configured
signing prefs.
Also switch EVP_PKEY_RSA to NID_rsaEncryption. These are identical, but
if some key types are to be NIDs, we should make them all NIDs.
Change-Id: I82ea41c27a3c57f4c4401ffe1ccad406783e4c64
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/8785
Reviewed-by: David Benjamin <davidben@google.com>