Commit Graph

7 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Andres Erbsen
16b2f42015 crypto/tls: implement tls-unique channel binding (RFC 5929 section 3).
Tested against GnuTLS and Python.

LGTM=agl
R=golang-codereviews, agl, ashankar
CC=agl, golang-codereviews
https://golang.org/cl/117100043
2014-08-11 16:40:42 -07:00
Brad Fitzpatrick
53431b940d crypto/tls: deflake TestConnReadNonzeroAndEOF
Fixes #7683

LGTM=rsc
R=rsc
CC=golang-codereviews
https://golang.org/cl/83080048
2014-04-02 14:31:57 -07:00
Brad Fitzpatrick
a56b0bf7e2 crypto/tls: make Conn.Read return (n, io.EOF) when EOF is next in buffer
Update #3514

An io.Reader is permitted to return either (n, nil)
or (n, io.EOF) on EOF or other error.

The tls package previously always returned (n, nil) for a read
of size n if n bytes were available, not surfacing errors at
the same time.

Amazon's HTTPS frontends like to hang up on clients without
sending the appropriate HTTP headers. (In their defense,
they're allowed to hang up any time, but generally a server
hangs up after a bit of inactivity, not immediately.) In any
case, the Go HTTP client tries to re-use connections by
looking at whether the response headers say to keep the
connection open, and because the connection looks okay, under
heavy load it's possible we'll reuse it immediately, writing
the next request, just as the Transport's always-reading
goroutine returns from tls.Conn.Read and sees (0, io.EOF).

But because Amazon does send an AlertCloseNotify record before
it hangs up on us, and the tls package does its own internal
buffering (up to 1024 bytes) of pending data, we have the
AlertCloseNotify in an unread buffer when our Conn.Read (to
the HTTP Transport code) reads its final bit of data in the
HTTP response body.

This change makes that final Read return (n, io.EOF) when
an AlertCloseNotify record is buffered right after, if we'd
otherwise return (n, nil).

A dependent change in the HTTP code then notes whether a
client connection has seen an io.EOF and uses that as an
additional signal to not reuse a HTTPS connection. With both
changes, the majority of Amazon request failures go
away. Without either one, 10-20 goroutines hitting the S3 API
leads to such an error rate that empirically up to 5 retries
are needed to complete an API call.

LGTM=agl, rsc
R=agl, rsc
CC=golang-codereviews
https://golang.org/cl/76400046
2014-03-25 10:58:35 -07:00
Adam Langley
8d65af24c4 crypto/tls: add DialWithDialer.
While reviewing uses of the lower-level Client API in code, I found
that in many cases, code was using Client only because it needed a
timeout on the connection. DialWithDialer allows a timeout (and
 other values) to be specified without resorting to the low-level API.

LGTM=r
R=golang-codereviews, r, bradfitz
CC=golang-codereviews
https://golang.org/cl/68920045
2014-02-28 09:40:12 -05:00
Brad Fitzpatrick
ada990689f crypto/tls: fix loading keys labeled just "PRIVATE KEY"
Worked in Go 1, broken in f440e65f93fe.

Fixes #4477

R=golang-dev, agl
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6865043
2012-12-01 11:02:08 -08:00
Joel Sing
d7e46146f4 crypto/tls: add support for loading EC X.509 key pairs
Add support for loading X.509 key pairs that consist of a certificate
with an EC public key and its corresponding EC private key.

R=agl
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6776043
2012-11-16 19:33:59 +11:00
Adam Langley
d263b7d38c crypto/tls: allow certificates and key to be in either order.
X509KeyPair wasn't really supposed to allow the certificate and
key to be in the same file, but it did work if you put the key
first. Since some HTTPS servers support loading keys and certs
like this, this change makes it work in either order.

Fixes #3986.

R=golang-dev, dave, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6499103
2012-09-13 11:00:16 -04:00