Alternative TLS implementation in Go
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common.go 43 KiB

6 years ago
6 years ago
crypto/tls: decouple handshake signatures from the handshake hash. Prior to TLS 1.2, the handshake had a pleasing property that one could incrementally hash it and, from that, get the needed hashes for both the CertificateVerify and Finished messages. TLS 1.2 introduced negotiation for the signature and hash and it became possible for the handshake hash to be, say, SHA-384, but for the CertificateVerify to sign the handshake with SHA-1. The problem is that one doesn't know in advance which hashes will be needed and thus the handshake needs to be buffered. Go ignored this, always kept a single handshake hash, and any signatures over the handshake had to use that hash. However, there are a set of servers that inspect the client's offered signature hash functions and will abort the handshake if one of the server's certificates is signed with a hash function outside of that set. https://robertsspaceindustries.com/ is an example of such a server. Clearly not a lot of thought happened when that server code was written, but its out there and we have to deal with it. This change decouples the handshake hash from the CertificateVerify hash. This lays the groundwork for advertising support for SHA-384 but doesn't actually make that change in the interests of reviewability. Updating the advertised hash functions will cause changes in many of the testdata/ files and some errors might get lost in the noise. This change only needs to update four testdata/ files: one because a SHA-384-based handshake is now being signed with SHA-256 and the others because the TLS 1.2 CertificateRequest message now includes SHA-1. This change also has the effect of adding support for client-certificates in SSLv3 servers. However, SSLv3 is now disabled by default so this should be moot. It would be possible to avoid much of this change and just support SHA-384 for the ServerKeyExchange as the SKX only signs over the nonces and SKX params (a design mistake in TLS). However, that would leave Go in the odd situation where it advertised support for SHA-384, but would only use the handshake hash when signing client certificates. I fear that'll just cause problems in the future. Much of this code was written by davidben@ for the purposes of testing BoringSSL. Partly addresses #9757 Change-Id: I5137a472b6076812af387a5a69fc62c7373cd485 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/9415 Run-TryBot: Adam Langley <agl@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Adam Langley <agl@golang.org>
9 years ago
crypto/tls: decouple handshake signatures from the handshake hash. Prior to TLS 1.2, the handshake had a pleasing property that one could incrementally hash it and, from that, get the needed hashes for both the CertificateVerify and Finished messages. TLS 1.2 introduced negotiation for the signature and hash and it became possible for the handshake hash to be, say, SHA-384, but for the CertificateVerify to sign the handshake with SHA-1. The problem is that one doesn't know in advance which hashes will be needed and thus the handshake needs to be buffered. Go ignored this, always kept a single handshake hash, and any signatures over the handshake had to use that hash. However, there are a set of servers that inspect the client's offered signature hash functions and will abort the handshake if one of the server's certificates is signed with a hash function outside of that set. https://robertsspaceindustries.com/ is an example of such a server. Clearly not a lot of thought happened when that server code was written, but its out there and we have to deal with it. This change decouples the handshake hash from the CertificateVerify hash. This lays the groundwork for advertising support for SHA-384 but doesn't actually make that change in the interests of reviewability. Updating the advertised hash functions will cause changes in many of the testdata/ files and some errors might get lost in the noise. This change only needs to update four testdata/ files: one because a SHA-384-based handshake is now being signed with SHA-256 and the others because the TLS 1.2 CertificateRequest message now includes SHA-1. This change also has the effect of adding support for client-certificates in SSLv3 servers. However, SSLv3 is now disabled by default so this should be moot. It would be possible to avoid much of this change and just support SHA-384 for the ServerKeyExchange as the SKX only signs over the nonces and SKX params (a design mistake in TLS). However, that would leave Go in the odd situation where it advertised support for SHA-384, but would only use the handshake hash when signing client certificates. I fear that'll just cause problems in the future. Much of this code was written by davidben@ for the purposes of testing BoringSSL. Partly addresses #9757 Change-Id: I5137a472b6076812af387a5a69fc62c7373cd485 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/9415 Run-TryBot: Adam Langley <agl@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Adam Langley <agl@golang.org>
9 years ago
crypto/tls: decouple handshake signatures from the handshake hash. Prior to TLS 1.2, the handshake had a pleasing property that one could incrementally hash it and, from that, get the needed hashes for both the CertificateVerify and Finished messages. TLS 1.2 introduced negotiation for the signature and hash and it became possible for the handshake hash to be, say, SHA-384, but for the CertificateVerify to sign the handshake with SHA-1. The problem is that one doesn't know in advance which hashes will be needed and thus the handshake needs to be buffered. Go ignored this, always kept a single handshake hash, and any signatures over the handshake had to use that hash. However, there are a set of servers that inspect the client's offered signature hash functions and will abort the handshake if one of the server's certificates is signed with a hash function outside of that set. https://robertsspaceindustries.com/ is an example of such a server. Clearly not a lot of thought happened when that server code was written, but its out there and we have to deal with it. This change decouples the handshake hash from the CertificateVerify hash. This lays the groundwork for advertising support for SHA-384 but doesn't actually make that change in the interests of reviewability. Updating the advertised hash functions will cause changes in many of the testdata/ files and some errors might get lost in the noise. This change only needs to update four testdata/ files: one because a SHA-384-based handshake is now being signed with SHA-256 and the others because the TLS 1.2 CertificateRequest message now includes SHA-1. This change also has the effect of adding support for client-certificates in SSLv3 servers. However, SSLv3 is now disabled by default so this should be moot. It would be possible to avoid much of this change and just support SHA-384 for the ServerKeyExchange as the SKX only signs over the nonces and SKX params (a design mistake in TLS). However, that would leave Go in the odd situation where it advertised support for SHA-384, but would only use the handshake hash when signing client certificates. I fear that'll just cause problems in the future. Much of this code was written by davidben@ for the purposes of testing BoringSSL. Partly addresses #9757 Change-Id: I5137a472b6076812af387a5a69fc62c7373cd485 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/9415 Run-TryBot: Adam Langley <agl@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Adam Langley <agl@golang.org>
9 years ago
6 years ago
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  1. // Copyright 2009 The Go Authors. All rights reserved.
  2. // Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style
  3. // license that can be found in the LICENSE file.
  4. package tls
  5. import (
  6. "container/list"
  7. "crypto"
  8. "crypto/rand"
  9. "crypto/sha512"
  10. "crypto/x509"
  11. "errors"
  12. "fmt"
  13. "golang.org/x/sys/cpu"
  14. "io"
  15. "math/big"
  16. "net"
  17. "strings"
  18. "sync"
  19. "time"
  20. )
  21. const (
  22. VersionSSL30 = 0x0300
  23. VersionTLS10 = 0x0301
  24. VersionTLS11 = 0x0302
  25. VersionTLS12 = 0x0303
  26. VersionTLS13 = 0x0304
  27. )
  28. const (
  29. maxPlaintext = 16384 // maximum plaintext payload length
  30. maxCiphertext = 16384 + 2048 // maximum ciphertext payload length
  31. recordHeaderLen = 5 // record header length
  32. maxHandshake = 65536 // maximum handshake we support (protocol max is 16 MB)
  33. maxWarnAlertCount = 5 // maximum number of consecutive warning alerts
  34. minVersion = VersionTLS12
  35. maxVersion = VersionTLS13
  36. )
  37. // TLS record types.
  38. type recordType uint8
  39. const (
  40. recordTypeChangeCipherSpec recordType = 20
  41. recordTypeAlert recordType = 21
  42. recordTypeHandshake recordType = 22
  43. recordTypeApplicationData recordType = 23
  44. )
  45. // TLS handshake message types.
  46. const (
  47. typeHelloRequest uint8 = 0
  48. typeClientHello uint8 = 1
  49. typeServerHello uint8 = 2
  50. typeNewSessionTicket uint8 = 4
  51. typeEndOfEarlyData uint8 = 5
  52. typeEncryptedExtensions uint8 = 8
  53. typeCertificate uint8 = 11
  54. typeServerKeyExchange uint8 = 12
  55. typeCertificateRequest uint8 = 13
  56. typeServerHelloDone uint8 = 14
  57. typeCertificateVerify uint8 = 15
  58. typeClientKeyExchange uint8 = 16
  59. typeFinished uint8 = 20
  60. typeCertificateStatus uint8 = 22
  61. typeNextProtocol uint8 = 67 // Not IANA assigned
  62. )
  63. // TLS compression types.
  64. const (
  65. compressionNone uint8 = 0
  66. )
  67. // TLS extension numbers
  68. const (
  69. extensionServerName uint16 = 0
  70. extensionStatusRequest uint16 = 5
  71. extensionSupportedCurves uint16 = 10 // Supported Groups in 1.3 nomenclature
  72. extensionSupportedPoints uint16 = 11
  73. extensionSignatureAlgorithms uint16 = 13
  74. extensionALPN uint16 = 16
  75. extensionSCT uint16 = 18 // https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6962#section-6
  76. extensionEMS uint16 = 23
  77. extensionSessionTicket uint16 = 35
  78. extensionPreSharedKey uint16 = 41
  79. extensionEarlyData uint16 = 42
  80. extensionSupportedVersions uint16 = 43
  81. extensionPSKKeyExchangeModes uint16 = 45
  82. extensionCAs uint16 = 47
  83. extensionSignatureAlgorithmsCert uint16 = 50
  84. extensionKeyShare uint16 = 51
  85. extensionNextProtoNeg uint16 = 13172 // not IANA assigned
  86. extensionRenegotiationInfo uint16 = 0xff01
  87. extensionDelegatedCredential uint16 = 0xff02 // TODO(any) Get IANA assignment
  88. )
  89. // TLS signaling cipher suite values
  90. const (
  91. scsvRenegotiation uint16 = 0x00ff
  92. )
  93. // PSK Key Exchange Modes
  94. // https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-ietf-tls-tls13-18#section-4.2.7
  95. const (
  96. pskDHEKeyExchange uint8 = 1
  97. )
  98. // CurveID is the type of a TLS identifier for an elliptic curve. See
  99. // http://www.iana.org/assignments/tls-parameters/tls-parameters.xml#tls-parameters-8
  100. //
  101. // TLS 1.3 refers to these as Groups, but this library implements only
  102. // curve-based ones anyway. See https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-ietf-tls-tls13-18#section-4.2.4.
  103. type CurveID uint16
  104. const (
  105. // Exported IDs
  106. CurveP256 CurveID = 23
  107. CurveP384 CurveID = 24
  108. CurveP521 CurveID = 25
  109. X25519 CurveID = 29
  110. // Experimental KEX
  111. HybridSIDHp503Curve25519 CurveID = 0xFE30
  112. HybridSIKEp503Curve25519 CurveID = 0xFE32
  113. )
  114. // TLS 1.3 Key Share
  115. // See https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-ietf-tls-tls13-18#section-4.2.5
  116. type keyShare struct {
  117. group CurveID
  118. data []byte
  119. }
  120. // TLS 1.3 PSK Identity and Binder, as sent by the client
  121. // https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-ietf-tls-tls13-18#section-4.2.6
  122. type psk struct {
  123. identity []byte
  124. obfTicketAge uint32
  125. binder []byte
  126. }
  127. // TLS Elliptic Curve Point Formats
  128. // http://www.iana.org/assignments/tls-parameters/tls-parameters.xml#tls-parameters-9
  129. const (
  130. pointFormatUncompressed uint8 = 0
  131. )
  132. // TLS CertificateStatusType (RFC 3546)
  133. const (
  134. statusTypeOCSP uint8 = 1
  135. )
  136. // Certificate types (for certificateRequestMsg)
  137. const (
  138. certTypeRSASign = 1 // A certificate containing an RSA key
  139. certTypeDSSSign = 2 // A certificate containing a DSA key
  140. certTypeRSAFixedDH = 3 // A certificate containing a static DH key
  141. certTypeDSSFixedDH = 4 // A certificate containing a static DH key
  142. // See RFC 4492 sections 3 and 5.5.
  143. certTypeECDSASign = 64 // A certificate containing an ECDSA-capable public key, signed with ECDSA.
  144. certTypeRSAFixedECDH = 65 // A certificate containing an ECDH-capable public key, signed with RSA.
  145. certTypeECDSAFixedECDH = 66 // A certificate containing an ECDH-capable public key, signed with ECDSA.
  146. // Rest of these are reserved by the TLS spec
  147. )
  148. // Signature algorithms (for internal signaling use). Starting at 16 to avoid overlap with
  149. // TLS 1.2 codepoints (RFC 5246, section A.4.1), with which these have nothing to do.
  150. const (
  151. signaturePKCS1v15 uint8 = iota + 16
  152. signatureECDSA
  153. signatureRSAPSS
  154. )
  155. // supportedSignatureAlgorithms contains the signature and hash algorithms that
  156. // the code advertises as supported in a TLS 1.2 ClientHello and in a TLS 1.2
  157. // CertificateRequest. The two fields are merged to match with TLS 1.3.
  158. // Note that in TLS 1.2, the ECDSA algorithms are not constrained to P-256, etc.
  159. var supportedSignatureAlgorithms = []SignatureScheme{
  160. PKCS1WithSHA256,
  161. ECDSAWithP256AndSHA256,
  162. PKCS1WithSHA384,
  163. ECDSAWithP384AndSHA384,
  164. PKCS1WithSHA512,
  165. ECDSAWithP521AndSHA512,
  166. PKCS1WithSHA1,
  167. ECDSAWithSHA1,
  168. }
  169. // supportedSignatureAlgorithms13 lists the advertised signature algorithms
  170. // allowed for digital signatures. It includes TLS 1.2 + PSS.
  171. var supportedSignatureAlgorithms13 = []SignatureScheme{
  172. PSSWithSHA256,
  173. PKCS1WithSHA256,
  174. ECDSAWithP256AndSHA256,
  175. PSSWithSHA384,
  176. PKCS1WithSHA384,
  177. ECDSAWithP384AndSHA384,
  178. PSSWithSHA512,
  179. PKCS1WithSHA512,
  180. ECDSAWithP521AndSHA512,
  181. PKCS1WithSHA1,
  182. ECDSAWithSHA1,
  183. }
  184. // ConnectionState records basic TLS details about the connection.
  185. type ConnectionState struct {
  186. ConnectionID []byte // Random unique connection id
  187. Version uint16 // TLS version used by the connection (e.g. VersionTLS12)
  188. HandshakeComplete bool // TLS handshake is complete
  189. DidResume bool // connection resumes a previous TLS connection
  190. CipherSuite uint16 // cipher suite in use (TLS_RSA_WITH_RC4_128_SHA, ...)
  191. NegotiatedProtocol string // negotiated next protocol (not guaranteed to be from Config.NextProtos)
  192. NegotiatedProtocolIsMutual bool // negotiated protocol was advertised by server (client side only)
  193. ServerName string // server name requested by client, if any (server side only)
  194. PeerCertificates []*x509.Certificate // certificate chain presented by remote peer
  195. VerifiedChains [][]*x509.Certificate // verified chains built from PeerCertificates
  196. SignedCertificateTimestamps [][]byte // SCTs from the server, if any
  197. OCSPResponse []byte // stapled OCSP response from server, if any
  198. DelegatedCredential []byte // Delegated credential sent by the server, if any
  199. // TLSUnique contains the "tls-unique" channel binding value (see RFC
  200. // 5929, section 3). For resumed sessions this value will be nil
  201. // because resumption does not include enough context (see
  202. // https://mitls.org/pages/attacks/3SHAKE#channelbindings). This will
  203. // change in future versions of Go once the TLS master-secret fix has
  204. // been standardized and implemented.
  205. TLSUnique []byte
  206. // HandshakeConfirmed is true once all data returned by Read
  207. // (past and future) is guaranteed not to be replayed.
  208. HandshakeConfirmed bool
  209. // Unique0RTTToken is a value that never repeats, and can be used
  210. // to detect replay attacks against 0-RTT connections.
  211. // Unique0RTTToken is only present if HandshakeConfirmed is false.
  212. Unique0RTTToken []byte
  213. ClientHello []byte // ClientHello packet
  214. }
  215. // ClientAuthType declares the policy the server will follow for
  216. // TLS Client Authentication.
  217. type ClientAuthType int
  218. const (
  219. NoClientCert ClientAuthType = iota
  220. RequestClientCert
  221. RequireAnyClientCert
  222. VerifyClientCertIfGiven
  223. RequireAndVerifyClientCert
  224. )
  225. // ClientSessionState contains the state needed by clients to resume TLS
  226. // sessions.
  227. type ClientSessionState struct {
  228. sessionTicket []uint8 // Encrypted ticket used for session resumption with server
  229. vers uint16 // SSL/TLS version negotiated for the session
  230. cipherSuite uint16 // Ciphersuite negotiated for the session
  231. masterSecret []byte // MasterSecret generated by client on a full handshake
  232. serverCertificates []*x509.Certificate // Certificate chain presented by the server
  233. verifiedChains [][]*x509.Certificate // Certificate chains we built for verification
  234. useEMS bool // State of extended master secret
  235. }
  236. // ClientSessionCache is a cache of ClientSessionState objects that can be used
  237. // by a client to resume a TLS session with a given server. ClientSessionCache
  238. // implementations should expect to be called concurrently from different
  239. // goroutines. Only ticket-based resumption is supported, not SessionID-based
  240. // resumption.
  241. type ClientSessionCache interface {
  242. // Get searches for a ClientSessionState associated with the given key.
  243. // On return, ok is true if one was found.
  244. Get(sessionKey string) (session *ClientSessionState, ok bool)
  245. // Put adds the ClientSessionState to the cache with the given key.
  246. Put(sessionKey string, cs *ClientSessionState)
  247. }
  248. // SignatureScheme identifies a signature algorithm supported by TLS. See
  249. // https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-ietf-tls-tls13-18#section-4.2.3.
  250. type SignatureScheme uint16
  251. const (
  252. PKCS1WithSHA1 SignatureScheme = 0x0201
  253. PKCS1WithSHA256 SignatureScheme = 0x0401
  254. PKCS1WithSHA384 SignatureScheme = 0x0501
  255. PKCS1WithSHA512 SignatureScheme = 0x0601
  256. PSSWithSHA256 SignatureScheme = 0x0804
  257. PSSWithSHA384 SignatureScheme = 0x0805
  258. PSSWithSHA512 SignatureScheme = 0x0806
  259. ECDSAWithP256AndSHA256 SignatureScheme = 0x0403
  260. ECDSAWithP384AndSHA384 SignatureScheme = 0x0503
  261. ECDSAWithP521AndSHA512 SignatureScheme = 0x0603
  262. // Legacy signature and hash algorithms for TLS 1.2.
  263. ECDSAWithSHA1 SignatureScheme = 0x0203
  264. )
  265. // ClientHelloInfo contains information from a ClientHello message in order to
  266. // guide certificate selection in the GetCertificate callback.
  267. type ClientHelloInfo struct {
  268. // CipherSuites lists the CipherSuites supported by the client (e.g.
  269. // TLS_RSA_WITH_RC4_128_SHA).
  270. CipherSuites []uint16
  271. // ServerName indicates the name of the server requested by the client
  272. // in order to support virtual hosting. ServerName is only set if the
  273. // client is using SNI (see
  274. // http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc4366#section-3.1).
  275. ServerName string
  276. // SupportedCurves lists the elliptic curves supported by the client.
  277. // SupportedCurves is set only if the Supported Elliptic Curves
  278. // Extension is being used (see
  279. // http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc4492#section-5.1.1).
  280. SupportedCurves []CurveID
  281. // SupportedPoints lists the point formats supported by the client.
  282. // SupportedPoints is set only if the Supported Point Formats Extension
  283. // is being used (see
  284. // http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc4492#section-5.1.2).
  285. SupportedPoints []uint8
  286. // SignatureSchemes lists the signature and hash schemes that the client
  287. // is willing to verify. SignatureSchemes is set only if the Signature
  288. // Algorithms Extension is being used (see
  289. // https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc5246#section-7.4.1.4.1).
  290. SignatureSchemes []SignatureScheme
  291. // SupportedProtos lists the application protocols supported by the client.
  292. // SupportedProtos is set only if the Application-Layer Protocol
  293. // Negotiation Extension is being used (see
  294. // https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc7301#section-3.1).
  295. //
  296. // Servers can select a protocol by setting Config.NextProtos in a
  297. // GetConfigForClient return value.
  298. SupportedProtos []string
  299. // SupportedVersions lists the TLS versions supported by the client.
  300. // For TLS versions less than 1.3, this is extrapolated from the max
  301. // version advertised by the client, so values other than the greatest
  302. // might be rejected if used.
  303. SupportedVersions []uint16
  304. // Conn is the underlying net.Conn for the connection. Do not read
  305. // from, or write to, this connection; that will cause the TLS
  306. // connection to fail.
  307. Conn net.Conn
  308. // Offered0RTTData is true if the client announced that it will send
  309. // 0-RTT data. If the server Config.Accept0RTTData is true, and the
  310. // client offered a session ticket valid for that purpose, it will
  311. // be notified that the 0-RTT data is accepted and it will be made
  312. // immediately available for Read.
  313. Offered0RTTData bool
  314. // AcceptsDelegatedCredential is true if the client indicated willingness
  315. // to negotiate the delegated credential extension.
  316. AcceptsDelegatedCredential bool
  317. // The Fingerprint is an sequence of bytes unique to this Client Hello.
  318. // It can be used to prevent or mitigate 0-RTT data replays as it's
  319. // guaranteed that a replayed connection will have the same Fingerprint.
  320. Fingerprint []byte
  321. }
  322. // CertificateRequestInfo contains information from a server's
  323. // CertificateRequest message, which is used to demand a certificate and proof
  324. // of control from a client.
  325. type CertificateRequestInfo struct {
  326. // AcceptableCAs contains zero or more, DER-encoded, X.501
  327. // Distinguished Names. These are the names of root or intermediate CAs
  328. // that the server wishes the returned certificate to be signed by. An
  329. // empty slice indicates that the server has no preference.
  330. AcceptableCAs [][]byte
  331. // SignatureSchemes lists the signature schemes that the server is
  332. // willing to verify.
  333. SignatureSchemes []SignatureScheme
  334. }
  335. // RenegotiationSupport enumerates the different levels of support for TLS
  336. // renegotiation. TLS renegotiation is the act of performing subsequent
  337. // handshakes on a connection after the first. This significantly complicates
  338. // the state machine and has been the source of numerous, subtle security
  339. // issues. Initiating a renegotiation is not supported, but support for
  340. // accepting renegotiation requests may be enabled.
  341. //
  342. // Even when enabled, the server may not change its identity between handshakes
  343. // (i.e. the leaf certificate must be the same). Additionally, concurrent
  344. // handshake and application data flow is not permitted so renegotiation can
  345. // only be used with protocols that synchronise with the renegotiation, such as
  346. // HTTPS.
  347. type RenegotiationSupport int
  348. const (
  349. // RenegotiateNever disables renegotiation.
  350. RenegotiateNever RenegotiationSupport = iota
  351. // RenegotiateOnceAsClient allows a remote server to request
  352. // renegotiation once per connection.
  353. RenegotiateOnceAsClient
  354. // RenegotiateFreelyAsClient allows a remote server to repeatedly
  355. // request renegotiation.
  356. RenegotiateFreelyAsClient
  357. )
  358. // A Config structure is used to configure a TLS client or server.
  359. // After one has been passed to a TLS function it must not be
  360. // modified. A Config may be reused; the tls package will also not
  361. // modify it.
  362. type Config struct {
  363. // Rand provides the source of entropy for nonces and RSA blinding.
  364. // If Rand is nil, TLS uses the cryptographic random reader in package
  365. // crypto/rand.
  366. // The Reader must be safe for use by multiple goroutines.
  367. Rand io.Reader
  368. // Time returns the current time as the number of seconds since the epoch.
  369. // If Time is nil, TLS uses time.Now.
  370. Time func() time.Time
  371. // Certificates contains one or more certificate chains to present to
  372. // the other side of the connection. Server configurations must include
  373. // at least one certificate or else set GetCertificate. Clients doing
  374. // client-authentication may set either Certificates or
  375. // GetClientCertificate.
  376. Certificates []Certificate
  377. // NameToCertificate maps from a certificate name to an element of
  378. // Certificates. Note that a certificate name can be of the form
  379. // '*.example.com' and so doesn't have to be a domain name as such.
  380. // See Config.BuildNameToCertificate
  381. // The nil value causes the first element of Certificates to be used
  382. // for all connections.
  383. NameToCertificate map[string]*Certificate
  384. // GetCertificate returns a Certificate based on the given
  385. // ClientHelloInfo. It will only be called if the client supplies SNI
  386. // information or if Certificates is empty.
  387. //
  388. // If GetCertificate is nil or returns nil, then the certificate is
  389. // retrieved from NameToCertificate. If NameToCertificate is nil, the
  390. // first element of Certificates will be used.
  391. GetCertificate func(*ClientHelloInfo) (*Certificate, error)
  392. // GetClientCertificate, if not nil, is called when a server requests a
  393. // certificate from a client. If set, the contents of Certificates will
  394. // be ignored.
  395. //
  396. // If GetClientCertificate returns an error, the handshake will be
  397. // aborted and that error will be returned. Otherwise
  398. // GetClientCertificate must return a non-nil Certificate. If
  399. // Certificate.Certificate is empty then no certificate will be sent to
  400. // the server. If this is unacceptable to the server then it may abort
  401. // the handshake.
  402. //
  403. // GetClientCertificate may be called multiple times for the same
  404. // connection if renegotiation occurs or if TLS 1.3 is in use.
  405. GetClientCertificate func(*CertificateRequestInfo) (*Certificate, error)
  406. // GetConfigForClient, if not nil, is called after a ClientHello is
  407. // received from a client. It may return a non-nil Config in order to
  408. // change the Config that will be used to handle this connection. If
  409. // the returned Config is nil, the original Config will be used. The
  410. // Config returned by this callback may not be subsequently modified.
  411. //
  412. // If GetConfigForClient is nil, the Config passed to Server() will be
  413. // used for all connections.
  414. //
  415. // Uniquely for the fields in the returned Config, session ticket keys
  416. // will be duplicated from the original Config if not set.
  417. // Specifically, if SetSessionTicketKeys was called on the original
  418. // config but not on the returned config then the ticket keys from the
  419. // original config will be copied into the new config before use.
  420. // Otherwise, if SessionTicketKey was set in the original config but
  421. // not in the returned config then it will be copied into the returned
  422. // config before use. If neither of those cases applies then the key
  423. // material from the returned config will be used for session tickets.
  424. GetConfigForClient func(*ClientHelloInfo) (*Config, error)
  425. // VerifyPeerCertificate, if not nil, is called after normal
  426. // certificate verification by either a TLS client or server. It
  427. // receives the raw ASN.1 certificates provided by the peer and also
  428. // any verified chains that normal processing found. If it returns a
  429. // non-nil error, the handshake is aborted and that error results.
  430. //
  431. // If normal verification fails then the handshake will abort before
  432. // considering this callback. If normal verification is disabled by
  433. // setting InsecureSkipVerify, or (for a server) when ClientAuth is
  434. // RequestClientCert or RequireAnyClientCert, then this callback will
  435. // be considered but the verifiedChains argument will always be nil.
  436. VerifyPeerCertificate func(rawCerts [][]byte, verifiedChains [][]*x509.Certificate) error
  437. // RootCAs defines the set of root certificate authorities
  438. // that clients use when verifying server certificates.
  439. // If RootCAs is nil, TLS uses the host's root CA set.
  440. RootCAs *x509.CertPool
  441. // NextProtos is a list of supported, application level protocols.
  442. NextProtos []string
  443. // ServerName is used to verify the hostname on the returned
  444. // certificates unless InsecureSkipVerify is given. It is also included
  445. // in the client's handshake to support virtual hosting unless it is
  446. // an IP address.
  447. ServerName string
  448. // ClientAuth determines the server's policy for
  449. // TLS Client Authentication. The default is NoClientCert.
  450. ClientAuth ClientAuthType
  451. // ClientCAs defines the set of root certificate authorities
  452. // that servers use if required to verify a client certificate
  453. // by the policy in ClientAuth.
  454. ClientCAs *x509.CertPool
  455. // InsecureSkipVerify controls whether a client verifies the
  456. // server's certificate chain and host name.
  457. // If InsecureSkipVerify is true, TLS accepts any certificate
  458. // presented by the server and any host name in that certificate.
  459. // In this mode, TLS is susceptible to man-in-the-middle attacks.
  460. // This should be used only for testing.
  461. InsecureSkipVerify bool
  462. // CipherSuites is a list of supported cipher suites to be used in
  463. // TLS 1.0-1.2. If CipherSuites is nil, TLS uses a list of suites
  464. // supported by the implementation.
  465. CipherSuites []uint16
  466. // PreferServerCipherSuites controls whether the server selects the
  467. // client's most preferred ciphersuite, or the server's most preferred
  468. // ciphersuite. If true then the server's preference, as expressed in
  469. // the order of elements in CipherSuites, is used.
  470. PreferServerCipherSuites bool
  471. // SessionTicketsDisabled may be set to true to disable session ticket
  472. // (resumption) support. Note that on clients, session ticket support is
  473. // also disabled if ClientSessionCache is nil.
  474. SessionTicketsDisabled bool
  475. // SessionTicketKey is used by TLS servers to provide session
  476. // resumption. See RFC 5077. If zero, it will be filled with
  477. // random data before the first server handshake.
  478. //
  479. // If multiple servers are terminating connections for the same host
  480. // they should all have the same SessionTicketKey. If the
  481. // SessionTicketKey leaks, previously recorded and future TLS
  482. // connections using that key are compromised.
  483. SessionTicketKey [32]byte
  484. // ClientSessionCache is a cache of ClientSessionState entries for TLS
  485. // session resumption. It is only used by clients.
  486. ClientSessionCache ClientSessionCache
  487. // MinVersion contains the minimum SSL/TLS version that is acceptable.
  488. // If zero, then TLS 1.0 is taken as the minimum.
  489. MinVersion uint16
  490. // MaxVersion contains the maximum SSL/TLS version that is acceptable.
  491. // If zero, then the maximum version supported by this package is used,
  492. // which is currently TLS 1.2.
  493. MaxVersion uint16
  494. // CurvePreferences contains the elliptic curves that will be used in
  495. // an ECDHE handshake, in preference order. If empty, the default will
  496. // be used.
  497. CurvePreferences []CurveID
  498. // DynamicRecordSizingDisabled disables adaptive sizing of TLS records.
  499. // When true, the largest possible TLS record size is always used. When
  500. // false, the size of TLS records may be adjusted in an attempt to
  501. // improve latency.
  502. DynamicRecordSizingDisabled bool
  503. // Renegotiation controls what types of renegotiation are supported.
  504. // The default, none, is correct for the vast majority of applications.
  505. Renegotiation RenegotiationSupport
  506. // KeyLogWriter optionally specifies a destination for TLS master secrets
  507. // in NSS key log format that can be used to allow external programs
  508. // such as Wireshark to decrypt TLS connections.
  509. // See https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Mozilla/Projects/NSS/Key_Log_Format.
  510. // Use of KeyLogWriter compromises security and should only be
  511. // used for debugging.
  512. KeyLogWriter io.Writer
  513. // If Max0RTTDataSize is not zero, the client will be allowed to use
  514. // session tickets to send at most this number of bytes of 0-RTT data.
  515. // 0-RTT data is subject to replay and has memory DoS implications.
  516. // The server will later be able to refuse the 0-RTT data with
  517. // Accept0RTTData, or wait for the client to prove that it's not
  518. // replayed with Conn.ConfirmHandshake.
  519. //
  520. // It has no meaning on the client.
  521. //
  522. // See https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-ietf-tls-tls13-18#section-2.3.
  523. Max0RTTDataSize uint32
  524. // Accept0RTTData makes the 0-RTT data received from the client
  525. // immediately available to Read. 0-RTT data is subject to replay.
  526. // Use Conn.ConfirmHandshake to wait until the data is known not
  527. // to be replayed after reading it.
  528. //
  529. // It has no meaning on the client.
  530. //
  531. // See https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-ietf-tls-tls13-18#section-2.3.
  532. Accept0RTTData bool
  533. // SessionTicketSealer, if not nil, is used to wrap and unwrap
  534. // session tickets, instead of SessionTicketKey.
  535. SessionTicketSealer SessionTicketSealer
  536. // AcceptDelegatedCredential is true if the client is willing to negotiate
  537. // the delegated credential extension.
  538. //
  539. // This value has no meaning for the server.
  540. //
  541. // See https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-ietf-tls-subcerts-02.
  542. AcceptDelegatedCredential bool
  543. // GetDelegatedCredential returns a DC and its private key for use in the
  544. // delegated credential extension. The inputs to the callback are some
  545. // information parsed from the ClientHello, as well as the protocol version
  546. // selected by the server. This is necessary because the DC is bound to the
  547. // protocol version in which it's used. The return value is the raw DC
  548. // encoded in the wire format specified in
  549. // https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-ietf-tls-subcerts-02. If the return
  550. // value is nil, then the server will not offer negotiate the extension.
  551. //
  552. // This value has no meaning for the client.
  553. GetDelegatedCredential func(*ClientHelloInfo, uint16) ([]byte, crypto.PrivateKey, error)
  554. serverInitOnce sync.Once // guards calling (*Config).serverInit
  555. // mutex protects sessionTicketKeys.
  556. mutex sync.RWMutex
  557. // sessionTicketKeys contains zero or more ticket keys. If the length
  558. // is zero, SessionTicketsDisabled must be true. The first key is used
  559. // for new tickets and any subsequent keys can be used to decrypt old
  560. // tickets.
  561. sessionTicketKeys []ticketKey
  562. // UseExtendedMasterSecret indicates whether or not the connection
  563. // should use the extended master secret computation if available
  564. UseExtendedMasterSecret bool
  565. }
  566. // ticketKeyNameLen is the number of bytes of identifier that is prepended to
  567. // an encrypted session ticket in order to identify the key used to encrypt it.
  568. const ticketKeyNameLen = 16
  569. // ticketKey is the internal representation of a session ticket key.
  570. type ticketKey struct {
  571. // keyName is an opaque byte string that serves to identify the session
  572. // ticket key. It's exposed as plaintext in every session ticket.
  573. keyName [ticketKeyNameLen]byte
  574. aesKey [16]byte
  575. hmacKey [16]byte
  576. }
  577. // ticketKeyFromBytes converts from the external representation of a session
  578. // ticket key to a ticketKey. Externally, session ticket keys are 32 random
  579. // bytes and this function expands that into sufficient name and key material.
  580. func ticketKeyFromBytes(b [32]byte) (key ticketKey) {
  581. hashed := sha512.Sum512(b[:])
  582. copy(key.keyName[:], hashed[:ticketKeyNameLen])
  583. copy(key.aesKey[:], hashed[ticketKeyNameLen:ticketKeyNameLen+16])
  584. copy(key.hmacKey[:], hashed[ticketKeyNameLen+16:ticketKeyNameLen+32])
  585. return key
  586. }
  587. // Clone returns a shallow clone of c. It is safe to clone a Config that is
  588. // being used concurrently by a TLS client or server.
  589. func (c *Config) Clone() *Config {
  590. // Running serverInit ensures that it's safe to read
  591. // SessionTicketsDisabled.
  592. c.serverInitOnce.Do(func() { c.serverInit(nil) })
  593. var sessionTicketKeys []ticketKey
  594. c.mutex.RLock()
  595. sessionTicketKeys = c.sessionTicketKeys
  596. c.mutex.RUnlock()
  597. return &Config{
  598. Rand: c.Rand,
  599. Time: c.Time,
  600. Certificates: c.Certificates,
  601. NameToCertificate: c.NameToCertificate,
  602. GetCertificate: c.GetCertificate,
  603. GetClientCertificate: c.GetClientCertificate,
  604. GetConfigForClient: c.GetConfigForClient,
  605. VerifyPeerCertificate: c.VerifyPeerCertificate,
  606. RootCAs: c.RootCAs,
  607. NextProtos: c.NextProtos,
  608. ServerName: c.ServerName,
  609. ClientAuth: c.ClientAuth,
  610. ClientCAs: c.ClientCAs,
  611. InsecureSkipVerify: c.InsecureSkipVerify,
  612. CipherSuites: c.CipherSuites,
  613. PreferServerCipherSuites: c.PreferServerCipherSuites,
  614. SessionTicketsDisabled: c.SessionTicketsDisabled,
  615. SessionTicketKey: c.SessionTicketKey,
  616. ClientSessionCache: c.ClientSessionCache,
  617. MinVersion: c.MinVersion,
  618. MaxVersion: c.MaxVersion,
  619. CurvePreferences: c.CurvePreferences,
  620. DynamicRecordSizingDisabled: c.DynamicRecordSizingDisabled,
  621. Renegotiation: c.Renegotiation,
  622. KeyLogWriter: c.KeyLogWriter,
  623. Accept0RTTData: c.Accept0RTTData,
  624. Max0RTTDataSize: c.Max0RTTDataSize,
  625. SessionTicketSealer: c.SessionTicketSealer,
  626. AcceptDelegatedCredential: c.AcceptDelegatedCredential,
  627. GetDelegatedCredential: c.GetDelegatedCredential,
  628. sessionTicketKeys: sessionTicketKeys,
  629. UseExtendedMasterSecret: c.UseExtendedMasterSecret,
  630. }
  631. }
  632. // serverInit is run under c.serverInitOnce to do initialization of c. If c was
  633. // returned by a GetConfigForClient callback then the argument should be the
  634. // Config that was passed to Server, otherwise it should be nil.
  635. func (c *Config) serverInit(originalConfig *Config) {
  636. if c.SessionTicketsDisabled || len(c.ticketKeys()) != 0 || c.SessionTicketSealer != nil {
  637. return
  638. }
  639. alreadySet := false
  640. for _, b := range c.SessionTicketKey {
  641. if b != 0 {
  642. alreadySet = true
  643. break
  644. }
  645. }
  646. if !alreadySet {
  647. if originalConfig != nil {
  648. copy(c.SessionTicketKey[:], originalConfig.SessionTicketKey[:])
  649. } else if _, err := io.ReadFull(c.rand(), c.SessionTicketKey[:]); err != nil {
  650. c.SessionTicketsDisabled = true
  651. return
  652. }
  653. }
  654. if originalConfig != nil {
  655. originalConfig.mutex.RLock()
  656. c.sessionTicketKeys = originalConfig.sessionTicketKeys
  657. originalConfig.mutex.RUnlock()
  658. } else {
  659. c.sessionTicketKeys = []ticketKey{ticketKeyFromBytes(c.SessionTicketKey)}
  660. }
  661. }
  662. func (c *Config) ticketKeys() []ticketKey {
  663. c.mutex.RLock()
  664. // c.sessionTicketKeys is constant once created. SetSessionTicketKeys
  665. // will only update it by replacing it with a new value.
  666. ret := c.sessionTicketKeys
  667. c.mutex.RUnlock()
  668. return ret
  669. }
  670. // SetSessionTicketKeys updates the session ticket keys for a server. The first
  671. // key will be used when creating new tickets, while all keys can be used for
  672. // decrypting tickets. It is safe to call this function while the server is
  673. // running in order to rotate the session ticket keys. The function will panic
  674. // if keys is empty.
  675. func (c *Config) SetSessionTicketKeys(keys [][32]byte) {
  676. if len(keys) == 0 {
  677. panic("tls: keys must have at least one key")
  678. }
  679. newKeys := make([]ticketKey, len(keys))
  680. for i, bytes := range keys {
  681. newKeys[i] = ticketKeyFromBytes(bytes)
  682. }
  683. c.mutex.Lock()
  684. c.sessionTicketKeys = newKeys
  685. c.mutex.Unlock()
  686. }
  687. func (c *Config) rand() io.Reader {
  688. r := c.Rand
  689. if r == nil {
  690. return rand.Reader
  691. }
  692. return r
  693. }
  694. func (c *Config) time() time.Time {
  695. t := c.Time
  696. if t == nil {
  697. t = time.Now
  698. }
  699. return t()
  700. }
  701. func hasOverlappingCipherSuites(cs1, cs2 []uint16) bool {
  702. for _, c1 := range cs1 {
  703. for _, c2 := range cs2 {
  704. if c1 == c2 {
  705. return true
  706. }
  707. }
  708. }
  709. return false
  710. }
  711. func (c *Config) cipherSuites() []uint16 {
  712. s := c.CipherSuites
  713. if s == nil {
  714. s = defaultCipherSuites()
  715. } else if c.maxVersion() >= VersionTLS13 {
  716. // Ensure that TLS 1.3 suites are always present, but respect
  717. // the application cipher suite preferences.
  718. s13 := defaultTLS13CipherSuites()
  719. if !hasOverlappingCipherSuites(s, s13) {
  720. allSuites := make([]uint16, len(s13)+len(s))
  721. allSuites = append(allSuites, s13...)
  722. s = append(allSuites, s...)
  723. }
  724. }
  725. return s
  726. }
  727. func (c *Config) minVersion() uint16 {
  728. if c == nil || c.MinVersion == 0 {
  729. return minVersion
  730. }
  731. return c.MinVersion
  732. }
  733. func (c *Config) maxVersion() uint16 {
  734. if c == nil || c.MaxVersion == 0 {
  735. return maxVersion
  736. }
  737. return c.MaxVersion
  738. }
  739. var defaultCurvePreferences = []CurveID{X25519, CurveP256, CurveP384, CurveP521}
  740. func (c *Config) curvePreferences() []CurveID {
  741. if c == nil || len(c.CurvePreferences) == 0 {
  742. return defaultCurvePreferences
  743. }
  744. return c.CurvePreferences
  745. }
  746. // mutualVersion returns the protocol version to use given the advertised
  747. // version of the peer using the legacy non-extension methods.
  748. func (c *Config) mutualVersion(vers uint16) (uint16, bool) {
  749. minVersion := c.minVersion()
  750. maxVersion := c.maxVersion()
  751. // Version 1.3 and higher are not negotiated via this mechanism.
  752. if maxVersion > VersionTLS12 {
  753. maxVersion = VersionTLS12
  754. }
  755. if vers < minVersion {
  756. return 0, false
  757. }
  758. if vers > maxVersion {
  759. vers = maxVersion
  760. }
  761. return vers, true
  762. }
  763. // pickVersion returns the protocol version to use given the advertised
  764. // versions of the peer using the Supported Versions extension.
  765. func (c *Config) pickVersion(peerSupportedVersions []uint16) (uint16, bool) {
  766. supportedVersions := c.getSupportedVersions()
  767. for _, supportedVersion := range supportedVersions {
  768. for _, version := range peerSupportedVersions {
  769. if version == supportedVersion {
  770. return version, true
  771. }
  772. }
  773. }
  774. return 0, false
  775. }
  776. // configSuppVersArray is the backing array of Config.getSupportedVersions
  777. var configSuppVersArray = [...]uint16{VersionTLS13, VersionTLS12, VersionTLS11, VersionTLS10, VersionSSL30}
  778. // getSupportedVersions returns the protocol versions that are supported by the
  779. // current configuration.
  780. func (c *Config) getSupportedVersions() []uint16 {
  781. minVersion := c.minVersion()
  782. maxVersion := c.maxVersion()
  783. // Sanity check to avoid advertising unsupported versions.
  784. if minVersion < VersionSSL30 {
  785. minVersion = VersionSSL30
  786. }
  787. if maxVersion > VersionTLS13 {
  788. maxVersion = VersionTLS13
  789. }
  790. if maxVersion < minVersion {
  791. return nil
  792. }
  793. return configSuppVersArray[VersionTLS13-maxVersion : VersionTLS13-minVersion+1]
  794. }
  795. // getCertificate returns the best certificate for the given ClientHelloInfo,
  796. // defaulting to the first element of c.Certificates.
  797. func (c *Config) getCertificate(clientHello *ClientHelloInfo) (*Certificate, error) {
  798. if c.GetCertificate != nil &&
  799. (len(c.Certificates) == 0 || len(clientHello.ServerName) > 0) {
  800. cert, err := c.GetCertificate(clientHello)
  801. if cert != nil || err != nil {
  802. return cert, err
  803. }
  804. }
  805. if len(c.Certificates) == 0 {
  806. return nil, errors.New("tls: no certificates configured")
  807. }
  808. if len(c.Certificates) == 1 || c.NameToCertificate == nil {
  809. // There's only one choice, so no point doing any work.
  810. return &c.Certificates[0], nil
  811. }
  812. name := strings.ToLower(clientHello.ServerName)
  813. for len(name) > 0 && name[len(name)-1] == '.' {
  814. name = name[:len(name)-1]
  815. }
  816. if cert, ok := c.NameToCertificate[name]; ok {
  817. return cert, nil
  818. }
  819. // try replacing labels in the name with wildcards until we get a
  820. // match.
  821. labels := strings.Split(name, ".")
  822. for i := range labels {
  823. labels[i] = "*"
  824. candidate := strings.Join(labels, ".")
  825. if cert, ok := c.NameToCertificate[candidate]; ok {
  826. return cert, nil
  827. }
  828. }
  829. // If nothing matches, return the first certificate.
  830. return &c.Certificates[0], nil
  831. }
  832. // BuildNameToCertificate parses c.Certificates and builds c.NameToCertificate
  833. // from the CommonName and SubjectAlternateName fields of each of the leaf
  834. // certificates.
  835. func (c *Config) BuildNameToCertificate() {
  836. c.NameToCertificate = make(map[string]*Certificate)
  837. for i := range c.Certificates {
  838. cert := &c.Certificates[i]
  839. x509Cert, err := x509.ParseCertificate(cert.Certificate[0])
  840. if err != nil {
  841. continue
  842. }
  843. if len(x509Cert.Subject.CommonName) > 0 {
  844. c.NameToCertificate[x509Cert.Subject.CommonName] = cert
  845. }
  846. for _, san := range x509Cert.DNSNames {
  847. c.NameToCertificate[san] = cert
  848. }
  849. }
  850. }
  851. // writeKeyLog logs client random and master secret if logging was enabled by
  852. // setting c.KeyLogWriter.
  853. func (c *Config) writeKeyLog(what string, clientRandom, masterSecret []byte) error {
  854. if c.KeyLogWriter == nil {
  855. return nil
  856. }
  857. logLine := []byte(fmt.Sprintf("%s %x %x\n", what, clientRandom, masterSecret))
  858. writerMutex.Lock()
  859. _, err := c.KeyLogWriter.Write(logLine)
  860. writerMutex.Unlock()
  861. return err
  862. }
  863. // writerMutex protects all KeyLogWriters globally. It is rarely enabled,
  864. // and is only for debugging, so a global mutex saves space.
  865. var writerMutex sync.Mutex
  866. // A Certificate is a chain of one or more certificates, leaf first.
  867. type Certificate struct {
  868. Certificate [][]byte
  869. // PrivateKey contains the private key corresponding to the public key
  870. // in Leaf. For a server, this must implement crypto.Signer and/or
  871. // crypto.Decrypter, with an RSA or ECDSA PublicKey. For a client
  872. // (performing client authentication), this must be a crypto.Signer
  873. // with an RSA or ECDSA PublicKey.
  874. PrivateKey crypto.PrivateKey
  875. // OCSPStaple contains an optional OCSP response which will be served
  876. // to clients that request it.
  877. OCSPStaple []byte
  878. // SignedCertificateTimestamps contains an optional list of Signed
  879. // Certificate Timestamps which will be served to clients that request it.
  880. SignedCertificateTimestamps [][]byte
  881. // Leaf is the parsed form of the leaf certificate, which may be
  882. // initialized using x509.ParseCertificate to reduce per-handshake
  883. // processing for TLS clients doing client authentication. If nil, the
  884. // leaf certificate will be parsed as needed.
  885. Leaf *x509.Certificate
  886. }
  887. type handshakeMessage interface {
  888. marshal() []byte
  889. unmarshal([]byte) alert
  890. }
  891. // lruSessionCache is a ClientSessionCache implementation that uses an LRU
  892. // caching strategy.
  893. type lruSessionCache struct {
  894. sync.Mutex
  895. m map[string]*list.Element
  896. q *list.List
  897. capacity int
  898. }
  899. type lruSessionCacheEntry struct {
  900. sessionKey string
  901. state *ClientSessionState
  902. }
  903. // NewLRUClientSessionCache returns a ClientSessionCache with the given
  904. // capacity that uses an LRU strategy. If capacity is < 1, a default capacity
  905. // is used instead.
  906. func NewLRUClientSessionCache(capacity int) ClientSessionCache {
  907. const defaultSessionCacheCapacity = 64
  908. if capacity < 1 {
  909. capacity = defaultSessionCacheCapacity
  910. }
  911. return &lruSessionCache{
  912. m: make(map[string]*list.Element),
  913. q: list.New(),
  914. capacity: capacity,
  915. }
  916. }
  917. // Put adds the provided (sessionKey, cs) pair to the cache.
  918. func (c *lruSessionCache) Put(sessionKey string, cs *ClientSessionState) {
  919. c.Lock()
  920. defer c.Unlock()
  921. if elem, ok := c.m[sessionKey]; ok {
  922. entry := elem.Value.(*lruSessionCacheEntry)
  923. entry.state = cs
  924. c.q.MoveToFront(elem)
  925. return
  926. }
  927. if c.q.Len() < c.capacity {
  928. entry := &lruSessionCacheEntry{sessionKey, cs}
  929. c.m[sessionKey] = c.q.PushFront(entry)
  930. return
  931. }
  932. elem := c.q.Back()
  933. entry := elem.Value.(*lruSessionCacheEntry)
  934. delete(c.m, entry.sessionKey)
  935. entry.sessionKey = sessionKey
  936. entry.state = cs
  937. c.q.MoveToFront(elem)
  938. c.m[sessionKey] = elem
  939. }
  940. // Get returns the ClientSessionState value associated with a given key. It
  941. // returns (nil, false) if no value is found.
  942. func (c *lruSessionCache) Get(sessionKey string) (*ClientSessionState, bool) {
  943. c.Lock()
  944. defer c.Unlock()
  945. if elem, ok := c.m[sessionKey]; ok {
  946. c.q.MoveToFront(elem)
  947. return elem.Value.(*lruSessionCacheEntry).state, true
  948. }
  949. return nil, false
  950. }
  951. // TODO(jsing): Make these available to both crypto/x509 and crypto/tls.
  952. type dsaSignature struct {
  953. R, S *big.Int
  954. }
  955. type ecdsaSignature dsaSignature
  956. var emptyConfig Config
  957. func defaultConfig() *Config {
  958. return &emptyConfig
  959. }
  960. var (
  961. once sync.Once
  962. varDefaultCipherSuites []uint16
  963. varDefaultTLS13CipherSuites []uint16
  964. )
  965. func defaultCipherSuites() []uint16 {
  966. once.Do(initDefaultCipherSuites)
  967. return varDefaultCipherSuites
  968. }
  969. func defaultTLS13CipherSuites() []uint16 {
  970. once.Do(initDefaultCipherSuites)
  971. return varDefaultTLS13CipherSuites
  972. }
  973. func initDefaultCipherSuites() {
  974. var topCipherSuites, topTLS13CipherSuites []uint16
  975. // Check the cpu flags for each platform that has optimized GCM implementations.
  976. // Worst case, these variables will just all be false
  977. hasGCMAsmAMD64 := cpu.X86.HasAES && cpu.X86.HasPCLMULQDQ
  978. hasGCMAsmARM64 := cpu.ARM64.HasAES && cpu.ARM64.HasPMULL
  979. // Keep in sync with crypto/aes/cipher_s390x.go.
  980. hasGCMAsmS390X := cpu.S390X.HasAES && cpu.S390X.HasAESCBC && cpu.S390X.HasAESCTR && (cpu.S390X.HasGHASH || cpu.S390X.HasAESGCM)
  981. hasGCMAsm := hasGCMAsmAMD64 || hasGCMAsmARM64 || hasGCMAsmS390X
  982. if hasGCMAsm {
  983. // If AES-GCM hardware is provided then prioritise AES-GCM
  984. // cipher suites.
  985. topTLS13CipherSuites = []uint16{
  986. TLS_AES_128_GCM_SHA256,
  987. TLS_AES_256_GCM_SHA384,
  988. TLS_CHACHA20_POLY1305_SHA256,
  989. }
  990. topCipherSuites = []uint16{
  991. TLS_ECDHE_RSA_WITH_AES_128_GCM_SHA256,
  992. TLS_ECDHE_RSA_WITH_AES_256_GCM_SHA384,
  993. TLS_ECDHE_ECDSA_WITH_AES_128_GCM_SHA256,
  994. TLS_ECDHE_ECDSA_WITH_AES_256_GCM_SHA384,
  995. TLS_ECDHE_RSA_WITH_CHACHA20_POLY1305,
  996. TLS_ECDHE_ECDSA_WITH_CHACHA20_POLY1305,
  997. }
  998. } else {
  999. // Without AES-GCM hardware, we put the ChaCha20-Poly1305
  1000. // cipher suites first.
  1001. topTLS13CipherSuites = []uint16{
  1002. TLS_CHACHA20_POLY1305_SHA256,
  1003. TLS_AES_128_GCM_SHA256,
  1004. TLS_AES_256_GCM_SHA384,
  1005. }
  1006. topCipherSuites = []uint16{
  1007. TLS_ECDHE_RSA_WITH_CHACHA20_POLY1305,
  1008. TLS_ECDHE_ECDSA_WITH_CHACHA20_POLY1305,
  1009. TLS_ECDHE_RSA_WITH_AES_128_GCM_SHA256,
  1010. TLS_ECDHE_RSA_WITH_AES_256_GCM_SHA384,
  1011. TLS_ECDHE_ECDSA_WITH_AES_128_GCM_SHA256,
  1012. TLS_ECDHE_ECDSA_WITH_AES_256_GCM_SHA384,
  1013. }
  1014. }
  1015. varDefaultTLS13CipherSuites = make([]uint16, 0, len(cipherSuites))
  1016. varDefaultTLS13CipherSuites = append(varDefaultTLS13CipherSuites, topTLS13CipherSuites...)
  1017. varDefaultCipherSuites = make([]uint16, 0, len(cipherSuites))
  1018. varDefaultCipherSuites = append(varDefaultCipherSuites, topCipherSuites...)
  1019. NextCipherSuite:
  1020. for _, suite := range cipherSuites {
  1021. if suite.flags&suiteDefaultOff != 0 {
  1022. continue
  1023. }
  1024. if suite.flags&suiteTLS13 != 0 {
  1025. for _, existing := range varDefaultTLS13CipherSuites {
  1026. if existing == suite.id {
  1027. continue NextCipherSuite
  1028. }
  1029. }
  1030. varDefaultTLS13CipherSuites = append(varDefaultTLS13CipherSuites, suite.id)
  1031. } else {
  1032. for _, existing := range varDefaultCipherSuites {
  1033. if existing == suite.id {
  1034. continue NextCipherSuite
  1035. }
  1036. }
  1037. varDefaultCipherSuites = append(varDefaultCipherSuites, suite.id)
  1038. }
  1039. }
  1040. varDefaultCipherSuites = append(varDefaultTLS13CipherSuites, varDefaultCipherSuites...)
  1041. }
  1042. func unexpectedMessageError(wanted, got interface{}) error {
  1043. return fmt.Errorf("tls: received unexpected handshake message of type %T when waiting for %T", got, wanted)
  1044. }
  1045. func isSupportedSignatureAlgorithm(sigAlg SignatureScheme, supportedSignatureAlgorithms []SignatureScheme) bool {
  1046. for _, s := range supportedSignatureAlgorithms {
  1047. if s == sigAlg {
  1048. return true
  1049. }
  1050. }
  1051. return false
  1052. }
  1053. // signatureFromSignatureScheme maps a signature algorithm to the underlying
  1054. // signature method (without hash function).
  1055. func signatureFromSignatureScheme(signatureAlgorithm SignatureScheme) uint8 {
  1056. switch signatureAlgorithm {
  1057. case PKCS1WithSHA1, PKCS1WithSHA256, PKCS1WithSHA384, PKCS1WithSHA512:
  1058. return signaturePKCS1v15
  1059. case PSSWithSHA256, PSSWithSHA384, PSSWithSHA512:
  1060. return signatureRSAPSS
  1061. case ECDSAWithSHA1, ECDSAWithP256AndSHA256, ECDSAWithP384AndSHA384, ECDSAWithP521AndSHA512:
  1062. return signatureECDSA
  1063. default:
  1064. return 0
  1065. }
  1066. }
  1067. // TODO(kk): Use variable length encoding?
  1068. func getUint24(b []byte) int {
  1069. n := int(b[2])
  1070. n += int(b[1] << 8)
  1071. n += int(b[0] << 16)
  1072. return n
  1073. }
  1074. func putUint24(b []byte, n int) {
  1075. b[0] = byte(n >> 16)
  1076. b[1] = byte(n >> 8)
  1077. b[2] = byte(n & 0xff)
  1078. }