... of the other cert verification checks so that you can set verifyhost
and verifypeer to FALSE and still check the public key.
Bug: http://curl.haxx.se/bug/view.cgi?id=1471
Reported-by: Kyle J. McKay
Carrying on from commit 037cd0d991, removed the following unimplemented
instances of curlssl_close_all():
Curl_axtls_close_all()
Curl_darwinssl_close_all()
Curl_cyassl_close_all()
Curl_gskit_close_all()
Curl_gtls_close_all()
Curl_nss_close_all()
Curl_polarssl_close_all()
Fixed the following warning and error from commit 3af90a6e19 when SSL
is not being used:
url.c:2004: warning C4013: 'Curl_ssl_cert_status_request' undefined;
assuming extern returning int
error LNK2019: unresolved external symbol Curl_ssl_cert_status_request
referenced in function Curl_setopt
Also known as "status_request" or OCSP stapling, defined in RFC6066 section 8.
This requires GnuTLS 3.1.3 or higher to build, however it's recommended to use
at least GnuTLS 3.3.11 since previous versions had a bug that caused the OCSP
response verfication to fail even on valid responses.
This option can be used to enable/disable certificate status verification using
the "Certificate Status Request" TLS extension defined in RFC6066 section 8.
This also adds the CURLE_SSL_INVALIDCERTSTATUS error, to be used when the
certificate status verification fails, and the Curl_ssl_cert_status_request()
function, used to check whether the SSL backend supports the status_request
extension.
If the session is still used by active SSL/TLS connections, it
cannot be closed yet. Thus we mark the session as not being cached
any longer so that the reference counting mechanism in
Curl_schannel_shutdown is used to close and free the session.
Reported-by: Jean-Francois Durand
...to avoid a session ID getting cached without certificate checking and
then after a subsequent _enabling_ of the check libcurl could still
re-use the session done without cert checks.
Bug: http://curl.haxx.se/docs/adv_20150108A.html
Reported-by: Marc Hesse
Prefer void for unused parameters, rather than assigning an argument to
itself as a) unintelligent compilers won't optimize it out, b) it can't
be used for const parameters, c) it will cause compilation warnings for
clang with -Wself-assign and d) is inconsistent with other areas of the
curl source code.
Moved our Initialize Security Context return attribute definitions to
the SSPI module, as a) these can be used by other SSPI based providers
and b) the ISC required attributes are defined there.
curl_schannel.h:123: warning: right-hand operand of comma expression
has no effect
Some instances of the curlssl_close_all() function were declared with a
void return type whilst others as int. The schannel version returned
CURLE_NOT_BUILT_IN and others simply returned zero, but in all cases the
return code was ignored by the calling function Curl_ssl_close_all().
For the time being and to keep the internal API consistent, changed all
declarations to use a void return type.
To reduce code we might want to consider removing the unimplemented
versions and use a void #define like schannel does.
Otherwise Curl_ssl_init_certinfo() can fail and set the num_of_certs
member variable to the requested count, which could then be used
incorrectly as libcurl closes down.
The return type for this function was 0 on success and 1 on error. This
was then examined by the calling functions and, in most cases, used to
return CURLE_OUT_OF_MEMORY.
Instead use CURLcode for the return type and return the out of memory
error directly, propagating it up the call stack.
The return type of this function is a boolean value, and even uses a
bool internally, so use bool in the function declaration as well as
the variables that store the return value, to avoid any confusion.
- do not grow memory by doubling its size
- do not leak previously allocated memory if reallocation fails
- replace while-loop with a single check to make sure
that the requested amount of data fits into the buffer
Bug: http://curl.haxx.se/bug/view.cgi?id=1450
Reported-by: Warren Menzer
- Prior to this change no SSL minimum version was set by default at
runtime for PolarSSL. Therefore in most cases PolarSSL would probably
have defaulted to a minimum version of SSLv3 which is no longer secure.