th5/tls.go
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

194 lines
5.3 KiB
Go

// Copyright 2009 The Go Authors. All rights reserved.
// Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style
// license that can be found in the LICENSE file.
// Package tls partially implements TLS 1.0, as specified in RFC 2246.
package tls
import (
"crypto/rsa"
"crypto/x509"
"encoding/pem"
"errors"
"io/ioutil"
"net"
"strings"
)
// Server returns a new TLS server side connection
// using conn as the underlying transport.
// The configuration config must be non-nil and must have
// at least one certificate.
func Server(conn net.Conn, config *Config) *Conn {
return &Conn{conn: conn, config: config}
}
// Client returns a new TLS client side connection
// using conn as the underlying transport.
// Client interprets a nil configuration as equivalent to
// the zero configuration; see the documentation of Config
// for the defaults.
func Client(conn net.Conn, config *Config) *Conn {
return &Conn{conn: conn, config: config, isClient: true}
}
// A listener implements a network listener (net.Listener) for TLS connections.
type listener struct {
net.Listener
config *Config
}
// Accept waits for and returns the next incoming TLS connection.
// The returned connection c is a *tls.Conn.
func (l *listener) Accept() (c net.Conn, err error) {
c, err = l.Listener.Accept()
if err != nil {
return
}
c = Server(c, l.config)
return
}
// NewListener creates a Listener which accepts connections from an inner
// Listener and wraps each connection with Server.
// The configuration config must be non-nil and must have
// at least one certificate.
func NewListener(inner net.Listener, config *Config) net.Listener {
l := new(listener)
l.Listener = inner
l.config = config
return l
}
// Listen creates a TLS listener accepting connections on the
// given network address using net.Listen.
// The configuration config must be non-nil and must have
// at least one certificate.
func Listen(network, laddr string, config *Config) (net.Listener, error) {
if config == nil || len(config.Certificates) == 0 {
return nil, errors.New("tls.Listen: no certificates in configuration")
}
l, err := net.Listen(network, laddr)
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
return NewListener(l, config), nil
}
// Dial connects to the given network address using net.Dial
// and then initiates a TLS handshake, returning the resulting
// TLS connection.
// Dial interprets a nil configuration as equivalent to
// the zero configuration; see the documentation of Config
// for the defaults.
func Dial(network, addr string, config *Config) (*Conn, error) {
raddr := addr
c, err := net.Dial(network, raddr)
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
colonPos := strings.LastIndex(raddr, ":")
if colonPos == -1 {
colonPos = len(raddr)
}
hostname := raddr[:colonPos]
if config == nil {
config = defaultConfig()
}
// If no ServerName is set, infer the ServerName
// from the hostname we're connecting to.
if config.ServerName == "" {
// Make a copy to avoid polluting argument or default.
c := *config
c.ServerName = hostname
config = &c
}
conn := Client(c, config)
if err = conn.Handshake(); err != nil {
c.Close()
return nil, err
}
return conn, nil
}
// LoadX509KeyPair reads and parses a public/private key pair from a pair of
// files. The files must contain PEM encoded data.
func LoadX509KeyPair(certFile, keyFile string) (cert Certificate, err error) {
certPEMBlock, err := ioutil.ReadFile(certFile)
if err != nil {
return
}
keyPEMBlock, err := ioutil.ReadFile(keyFile)
if err != nil {
return
}
return X509KeyPair(certPEMBlock, keyPEMBlock)
}
// X509KeyPair parses a public/private key pair from a pair of
// PEM encoded data.
func X509KeyPair(certPEMBlock, keyPEMBlock []byte) (cert Certificate, err error) {
var certDERBlock *pem.Block
for {
certDERBlock, certPEMBlock = pem.Decode(certPEMBlock)
if certDERBlock == nil {
break
}
if certDERBlock.Type == "CERTIFICATE" {
cert.Certificate = append(cert.Certificate, certDERBlock.Bytes)
}
}
if len(cert.Certificate) == 0 {
err = errors.New("crypto/tls: failed to parse certificate PEM data")
return
}
var keyDERBlock *pem.Block
for {
keyDERBlock, keyPEMBlock = pem.Decode(keyPEMBlock)
if keyDERBlock == nil {
err = errors.New("crypto/tls: failed to parse key PEM data")
return
}
if keyDERBlock.Type != "CERTIFICATE" {
break
}
}
// OpenSSL 0.9.8 generates PKCS#1 private keys by default, while
// OpenSSL 1.0.0 generates PKCS#8 keys. We try both.
var key *rsa.PrivateKey
if key, err = x509.ParsePKCS1PrivateKey(keyDERBlock.Bytes); err != nil {
var privKey interface{}
if privKey, err = x509.ParsePKCS8PrivateKey(keyDERBlock.Bytes); err != nil {
err = errors.New("crypto/tls: failed to parse key: " + err.Error())
return
}
var ok bool
if key, ok = privKey.(*rsa.PrivateKey); !ok {
err = errors.New("crypto/tls: found non-RSA private key in PKCS#8 wrapping")
return
}
}
cert.PrivateKey = key
// We don't need to parse the public key for TLS, but we so do anyway
// to check that it looks sane and matches the private key.
x509Cert, err := x509.ParseCertificate(cert.Certificate[0])
if err != nil {
return
}
if x509Cert.PublicKeyAlgorithm != x509.RSA || x509Cert.PublicKey.(*rsa.PublicKey).N.Cmp(key.PublicKey.N) != 0 {
err = errors.New("crypto/tls: private key does not match public key")
return
}
return
}