17b3083373
In TLS 1.2, resumption's benefits are more-or-less subsumed by False Start. TLS 1.2 resumption lifetime is bounded by how much traffic we are willing to encrypt without fresh key material, so the lifetime is short. Renewal uses the same key, so we do not allow it to increase lifetimes. In TLS 1.3, resumption unlocks 0-RTT. We do not implement psk_ke, so resumption incorporates fresh key material into both encrypted traffic (except for early data) and renewed tickets. Thus we are both more willing to and more interested in longer lifetimes for tickets. Renewal is also not useless. Thus in TLS 1.3, lifetime is bound separately by the lifetime of a given secret as a psk_dhe_ke authenticator and the lifetime of the online signature which authenticated the initial handshake. This change maintains two lifetimes on an SSL_SESSION: timeout which is the renewable lifetime of this ticket, and auth_timeout which is the non-renewable cliff. It also separates the TLS 1.2 and TLS 1.3 timeouts. The old session timeout defaults and configuration apply to TLS 1.3, and we define new ones for TLS 1.3. Finally, this makes us honor the NewSessionTicket timeout in TLS 1.3. It's no longer a "hint" in 1.3 and there's probably value in avoiding known-useless 0-RTT offers. BUG=120 Change-Id: Iac46d56e5a6a377d8b88b8fa31f492d534cb1b85 Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/13503 Reviewed-by: Adam Langley <agl@google.com> |
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openssl |