Commit Graph

7 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
David Benjamin
ece3de95c6 Enforce that sessions are resumed at the version they're created.
After sharding the session cache for fallbacks, the numbers have been pretty
good; 0.03% on dev and 0.02% on canary. Stable is at 0.06% but does not have
the sharded session cache. Before sharding, stable, beta, and dev had been
fairly closely aligned. Between 0.03% being low and the fallback saving us in
all but extremely contrived cases, I think this should be fairly safe.

Add tests for both the cipher suite and protocol version mismatch checks.

BUG=441456

Change-Id: I2374bf64d0aee0119f293d207d45319c274d89ab
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/3972
Reviewed-by: Adam Langley <agl@google.com>
2015-04-06 21:40:32 +00:00
David Benjamin
d81e73dcbb Factor out sequence number updates.
Also check for overflow, although it really shouldn't happen.

Change-Id: I34dfe8eaf635aeaa8bef2656fda3cd0bad7e1268
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/4235
Reviewed-by: Adam Langley <agl@google.com>
2015-04-06 20:50:37 +00:00
David Benjamin
9faafdaeb8 Clean up do_ssl3_write fragment handling.
Separate actually writing the fragment to the network from assembling it so
there is no need for is_fragment. record_split_done also needn't be a global;
as of 7fdeaf1101, it is always reset to 0 whether
or not SSL3_WANT_WRITE occurred, despite the comment.

I believe this is sound, but the pre-7fdeaf1 logic wasn't quiiite right;
ssl3_write_pending allows a retry to supply *additional* data, so not all
plaintext had been commited to before the IV was randomized. We could fix this
by tracking how many bytes were committed to the last time we fragmented, but
this is purely an optimization and doesn't seem worth the complexity.

This also fixes the alignment computation in the record-splitting case. The
extra byte was wrong, as demonstrated by the assert.

Change-Id: Ia087a45a6622f4faad32e501942cc910eca1237b
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/4234
Reviewed-by: Adam Langley <agl@google.com>
2015-04-06 18:53:15 +00:00
David Benjamin
ee562b987e Get rid of the RSMBLY macros.
Turn them into static functions that take in an hm_fragment. It's not
immediately obvious that the frag_off/frag_len bounds checks and the msg_len
consistency check are critical to avoiding an out-of-bounds write. Better to
have dtls1_hm_fragment_mark also check internally.

Also rework the bitmask logic to be clearer and avoid a table.

Change-Id: Ica54e98f66295efb323e033cb6c67ab21e7d6cbc
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/3765
Reviewed-by: Adam Langley <agl@google.com>
2015-03-10 01:11:21 +00:00
David Benjamin
7538122ca6 Rework DTLS handshake message reassembly logic.
Notably, drop all special cases around receiving a message in order and
receiving a full message. It makes things more complicated and was the source
of bugs (the MixCompleteMessageWithFragments tests added in this CL did not
pass before). Instead, every message goes through an hm_fragment, and
dtls1_get_message always checks buffered_messages to see if the next is
complete.

The downside is that we pay one more copy of the message data in the common
case. This is only during connection setup, so I think it's worth the
simplicity. (If we want to optimize later, we could either tighten
ssl3_get_message's interface to allow the handshake data being in the
hm_fragment's backing store rather than s->init_buf or swap out s->init_buf
with the hm_fragment's backing store when a mesasge completes.

This CL does not address ssl_read_bytes being an inappropriate API for DTLS.
Future work will revise the handshake/transport boundary to align better with
DTLS's needs. Also other problems that I've left as TODOs.

Change-Id: Ib4570d45634b5181ecf192894d735e8699b1c86b
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/3764
Reviewed-by: Adam Langley <agl@google.com>
2015-03-10 00:56:45 +00:00
David Benjamin
689be0f4b7 Reset all the error codes.
This saves about 6-7k of error data.

Change-Id: Ic28593d4a1f5454f00fb2399d281c351ee57fb14
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/3385
Reviewed-by: Adam Langley <agl@google.com>
2015-02-11 23:12:08 +00:00
Adam Langley
29b186736c Precompute sorted array for error strings.
Previously, error strings were kept in arrays for each subdirectory and
err.c would iterate over them all and insert them at init time to a hash
table.

This means that, even if you have a shared library and lots of processes
using that, each process has ~30KB of private memory from building that
hash table.

This this change, all the error strings are built into a sorted list and
are thus static data. This means that processes can share the error
information and it actually saves binary space because of all the
pointer overhead in the old scheme. Also it saves the time taken
building the hash table at startup.

This removes support for externally-supplied error string data.

Change-Id: Ifca04f335c673a048e1a3e76ff2b69c7264635be
2015-02-09 17:35:31 -08:00