The entire idea of introducing the Curl_ssl struct to describe SSL
backends is to prepare for choosing the SSL backend at runtime.
To that end, convert all the #ifdef have_curlssl_* style conditionals
to use bit flags instead.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
The SHA-256 checksumming is also an SSL backend-specific function.
Let's include it in the struct declaring the functionality of SSL
backends.
In contrast to MD5, there is no fall-back code. To indicate this, the
respective entries are NULL for those backends that offer no support for
SHA-256 checksumming.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
The MD5 summing is also an SSL backend-specific function. So let's
include it, offering the previous fall-back code as a separate function
now: Curl_none_md5sum(). To allow for that, the signature had to be
changed so that an error could be returned from the implementation
(Curl_none_md5sum() can run out of memory).
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
This is the first step to unify the SSL backend handling. Now all the
SSL backend-specific functionality is accessed via a global instance of
the Curl_ssl struct.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
The idea of introducing the Curl_ssl struct was to unify how the SSL
backends are declared and called. To this end, we now provide an
instance of the Curl_ssl struct for each and every SSL backend.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
... causing a SIGSEGV in showit() in case the handle used to initiate
the connection has already been freed.
This commit fixes a bug introduced in curl-7_19_5-204-g5f0cae803.
Reported-by: Rob Sanders
Bug: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/1436158
The module contains a more comprehensive set of trust information than
supported by nss-pem, because libnssckbi.so also includes information
about distrusted certificates.
Reviewed-by: Kai Engert
Closes#1414
This fixes 3 warnings issued by MinGW:
1. PR_ImportTCPSocket actually has a paramter of type PROsfd instead of
PRInt32, which is 64 bits on Windows. Fixed this by including the
corresponding header file instead of redeclaring the function, which is
supported even though it is in the private include folder. [1]
2. In 64-bit mode, size_t is 64 bits while CK_ULONG is 32 bits, so an explicit
narrowing cast is needed.
3. Curl_timeleft returns time_t instead of long since commit
21aa32d30d.
[1] https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Mozilla/Projects/NSPR/Reference/PR_ImportTCPSocket
Closes https://github.com/curl/curl/pull/1393
... because they may include an intermediate certificate for a client
certificate and the intermediate certificate needs to be presented to
the server, no matter if we verify the peer or not.
Reported-by: thraidh
Closes#851
This commit introduces the CURL_SSLVERSION_MAX_* constants as well as
the --tls-max option of the curl tool.
Closes https://github.com/curl/curl/pull/1166
If the NSS code was in the middle of a non-blocking handshake and it
was asked to finish the handshake in blocking mode, it unexpectedly
continued in the non-blocking mode, which caused a FTPS connection
over CONNECT to fail with "(81) Socket not ready for send/recv".
Bug: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/1420327
* HTTPS proxies:
An HTTPS proxy receives all transactions over an SSL/TLS connection.
Once a secure connection with the proxy is established, the user agent
uses the proxy as usual, including sending CONNECT requests to instruct
the proxy to establish a [usually secure] TCP tunnel with an origin
server. HTTPS proxies protect nearly all aspects of user-proxy
communications as opposed to HTTP proxies that receive all requests
(including CONNECT requests) in vulnerable clear text.
With HTTPS proxies, it is possible to have two concurrent _nested_
SSL/TLS sessions: the "outer" one between the user agent and the proxy
and the "inner" one between the user agent and the origin server
(through the proxy). This change adds supports for such nested sessions
as well.
A secure connection with a proxy requires its own set of the usual SSL
options (their actual descriptions differ and need polishing, see TODO):
--proxy-cacert FILE CA certificate to verify peer against
--proxy-capath DIR CA directory to verify peer against
--proxy-cert CERT[:PASSWD] Client certificate file and password
--proxy-cert-type TYPE Certificate file type (DER/PEM/ENG)
--proxy-ciphers LIST SSL ciphers to use
--proxy-crlfile FILE Get a CRL list in PEM format from the file
--proxy-insecure Allow connections to proxies with bad certs
--proxy-key KEY Private key file name
--proxy-key-type TYPE Private key file type (DER/PEM/ENG)
--proxy-pass PASS Pass phrase for the private key
--proxy-ssl-allow-beast Allow security flaw to improve interop
--proxy-sslv2 Use SSLv2
--proxy-sslv3 Use SSLv3
--proxy-tlsv1 Use TLSv1
--proxy-tlsuser USER TLS username
--proxy-tlspassword STRING TLS password
--proxy-tlsauthtype STRING TLS authentication type (default SRP)
All --proxy-foo options are independent from their --foo counterparts,
except --proxy-crlfile which defaults to --crlfile and --proxy-capath
which defaults to --capath.
Curl now also supports %{proxy_ssl_verify_result} --write-out variable,
similar to the existing %{ssl_verify_result} variable.
Supported backends: OpenSSL, GnuTLS, and NSS.
* A SOCKS proxy + HTTP/HTTPS proxy combination:
If both --socks* and --proxy options are given, Curl first connects to
the SOCKS proxy and then connects (through SOCKS) to the HTTP or HTTPS
proxy.
TODO: Update documentation for the new APIs and --proxy-* options.
Look for "Added in 7.XXX" marks.
- Fix GnuTLS code for CURL_SSLVERSION_TLSv1_2 that broke when the
TLS 1.3 support was added in 6ad3add.
- Homogenize across code for all backends the error message when TLS 1.3
is not available to "<backend>: TLS 1.3 is not yet supported".
- Return an error when a user-specified ssl version is unrecognized.
---
Prior to this change our code for some of the backends used the
'default' label in the switch statement (ie ver unrecognized) for
ssl.version and treated it the same as CURL_SSLVERSION_DEFAULT.
Bug: https://curl.haxx.se/mail/lib-2016-11/0048.html
Reported-by: Kamil Dudka
As it seems to be a rarely used cipher suite (for securely established
but _unencrypted_ connections), I believe it is fine not to provide an
alias for the misspelled variant.
Serialise the call to PK11_FindSlotByName() to avoid spurious errors in
a multi-threaded environment. The underlying cause is a race condition
in nssSlot_IsTokenPresent().
Bug: https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/1297397Closes#985
Only protocols that actually have a protocol registered for ALPN and NPN
should try to get that negotiated in the TLS handshake. That is only
HTTPS (well, http/1.1 and http/2) right now. Previously ALPN and NPN
would wrongly be used in all handshakes if libcurl was built with it
enabled.
Reported-by: Jay Satiro
Fixes#789
Without this workaround, NSS re-uses a session cache entry despite the
server name does not match. This causes SNI host name to differ from
the actual host name. Consequently, certain servers (e.g. github.com)
respond by 400 to such requests.
Bug: https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/1202264