1) Remove the Reset() member in crypto/aes and crypto/des (and
document the change).
2) Turn several empty error structures into vars. Any remaining error
structures are either non-empty, or will probably become so in the
future.
3) Implement SetWriteDeadline for TLS sockets. At the moment, the TLS
status cannot be reused after a Write error, which is probably fine
for most uses.
4) Make crypto/aes and crypto/des return a cipher.Block.
R=rsc, r
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5625045
Previously, a timeout (in int64 nanoseconds) applied to a granularity
even smaller than one operation: a 100 byte read with a 1 second timeout
could take 100 seconds, if the bytes all arrived on the network 1 second
apart. This was confusing.
Rather than making the timeout granularity be per-Read/Write,
this CL makes callers set an absolute deadline (in time.Time)
after which operations will fail. This makes it possible to
set deadlines at higher levels, without knowing exactly how
many read/write operations will happen in e.g. reading an HTTP
request.
Fixes#2723
R=r, rsc, dave
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5555048
The code in hash functions themselves could write directly into the
output buffer for a savings of about 50ns. But it's a little ugly so I
wasted a copy.
R=bradfitz
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5440111
tls.Conn.Close() didn't close the underlying connection and tried to
do a handshake in order to send the close notify alert.
http didn't look for errors from the TLS handshake.
Fixes#2281.
R=bradfitz
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5283045
It would be nice not to have to support this since all the clients
that we care about support TLSv1 by now. However, due to buggy
implementations of SSLv3 on the Internet which can't do version
negotiation correctly, browsers will sometimes switch to SSLv3. Since
there's no good way for a browser tell a network problem from a buggy
server, this downgrade can occur even if the server in question is
actually working correctly.
So we need to support SSLv3 for robustness :(
Fixes#1703.
R=bradfitz
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5018045
This is a core API change.
1) gofix misc src
2) Manual adjustments to the following files under src/pkg:
gob/decode.go
rpc/client.go
os/error.go
io/io.go
bufio/bufio.go
http/request.go
websocket/client.go
as well as:
src/cmd/gofix/testdata/*.go.in (reverted)
test/fixedbugs/bug243.go
3) Implemented gofix patch (oserrorstring.go) and test case (oserrorstring_test.go)
Compiles and runs all tests.
R=r, rsc, gri
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/4607052
People have a need to verify certificates in situations other than TLS
client handshaking. Thus this CL moves certificate verification into
x509 and expands its abilities.
R=bradfitzgo
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/4407046
This is largely based on ality's CL 2747042.
crypto/rc4: API break in order to conform to crypto/cipher's
Stream interface
cipher/cipher: promote to the default build
Since CBC differs between TLS 1.0 and 1.1, we downgrade and
support only 1.0 at the current time. 1.0 is what most of the
world uses.
Given this CL, it would be trival to add support for AES 256,
SHA 256 etc, but I haven't in order to keep the change smaller.
R=rsc
CC=ality, golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/3659041
Changed all uses of bytes.Add (aside from those testing bytes.Add) to append(a, b...).
Also ran "gofmt -s" and made use of copy([]byte, string) in the fasta benchmark.
R=golang-dev, r, r2
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/3302042
asn1: add support for T61String because this is the string type which
several www.google.com certificates are now using for fields like
CommonName
tls: force a handshake in Dial so that certificates are ready
afterwards.
Fixes#1114.
R=rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/2216043
This changeset implements client certificate support in crypto/tls
for both handshake_server.go and handshake_client.go
The updated server implementation sends an empty CertificateAuthorities
field in the CertificateRequest, thus allowing clients to send any
certificates they wish. Likewise, the client code will only respond
with its certificate when the server requests a certificate with this
field empty.
R=agl, rsc, agl1
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/1975042
SNI (Server Name Indication) is a way for a TLS client to
indicate to the server which name it knows the server by. This
allows the server to have several names and return the correct
certificate for each (virtual hosting).
PeerCertificates returns the list of certificates presented by
server.
R=r
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/1741053