/* SSL support via OpenSSL library. Copyright (C) 2000-2005 Free Software Foundation, Inc. Originally contributed by Christian Fraenkel. This file is part of GNU Wget. GNU Wget is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. GNU Wget is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with Wget; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA. In addition, as a special exception, the Free Software Foundation gives permission to link the code of its release of Wget with the OpenSSL project's "OpenSSL" library (or with modified versions of it that use the same license as the "OpenSSL" library), and distribute the linked executables. You must obey the GNU General Public License in all respects for all of the code used other than "OpenSSL". If you modify this file, you may extend this exception to your version of the file, but you are not obligated to do so. If you do not wish to do so, delete this exception statement from your version. */ #include #include #include #ifdef HAVE_UNISTD_H # include #endif #ifdef HAVE_STRING_H # include #else # include #endif #include #include #include #include #include "wget.h" #include "utils.h" #include "connect.h" #include "url.h" #include "ssl.h" #ifndef errno extern int errno; #endif /* Application-wide SSL context. This is common to all SSL connections. */ SSL_CTX *ssl_ctx; /* Initialize the SSL's PRNG using various methods. */ static void init_prng (void) { char namebuf[256]; const char *random_file; if (RAND_status ()) /* The PRNG has been seeded; no further action is necessary. */ return; /* Seed from a file specified by the user. This will be the file specified with --random-file, $RANDFILE, if set, or ~/.rnd, if it exists. */ if (opt.random_file) random_file = opt.random_file; else { /* Get the random file name using RAND_file_name. */ namebuf[0] = '\0'; random_file = RAND_file_name (namebuf, sizeof (namebuf)); } if (random_file && *random_file) /* Seed at most 16k (apparently arbitrary value borrowed from curl) from random file. */ RAND_load_file (random_file, 16384); if (RAND_status ()) return; /* Get random data from EGD if opt.egd_file was used. */ if (opt.egd_file && *opt.egd_file) RAND_egd (opt.egd_file); if (RAND_status ()) return; #ifdef WINDOWS /* Under Windows, we can try to seed the PRNG using screen content. This may or may not work, depending on whether we'll calling Wget interactively. */ RAND_screen (); if (RAND_status ()) return; #endif #if 0 /* don't do this by default */ { int maxrand = 500; /* Still not random enough, presumably because neither /dev/random nor EGD were available. Try to seed OpenSSL's PRNG with libc PRNG. This is cryptographically weak and defeats the purpose of using OpenSSL, which is why it is highly discouraged. */ logprintf (LOG_NOTQUIET, _("WARNING: using a weak random seed.\n")); while (RAND_status () == 0 && maxrand-- > 0) { unsigned char rnd = random_number (256); RAND_seed (&rnd, sizeof (rnd)); } } #endif } /* Print errors in the OpenSSL error stack. */ static void print_errors (void) { unsigned long curerr = 0; while ((curerr = ERR_get_error ()) != 0) logprintf (LOG_NOTQUIET, "OpenSSL: %s\n", ERR_error_string (curerr, NULL)); } /* Convert keyfile type as used by options.h to a type as accepted by SSL_CTX_use_certificate_file and SSL_CTX_use_PrivateKey_file. (options.h intentionally doesn't use values from openssl/ssl.h so it doesn't depend specifically on OpenSSL for SSL functionality.) */ static int key_type_to_ssl_type (enum keyfile_type type) { switch (type) { case keyfile_pem: return SSL_FILETYPE_PEM; case keyfile_asn1: return SSL_FILETYPE_ASN1; default: abort (); } } /* Create an SSL Context and set default paths etc. Called the first time an HTTP download is attempted. Returns 1 on success, 0 otherwise. */ int ssl_init () { SSL_METHOD *meth; if (ssl_ctx) /* The SSL has already been initialized. */ return 1; /* Init the PRNG. If that fails, bail out. */ init_prng (); if (RAND_status () != 1) { logprintf (LOG_NOTQUIET, _("Could not seed PRNG; consider using --random-file.\n")); goto error; } SSL_library_init (); SSL_load_error_strings (); SSLeay_add_all_algorithms (); SSLeay_add_ssl_algorithms (); switch (opt.secure_protocol) { case secure_protocol_auto: meth = SSLv23_client_method (); break; case secure_protocol_sslv2: meth = SSLv2_client_method (); break; case secure_protocol_sslv3: meth = SSLv3_client_method (); break; case secure_protocol_tlsv1: meth = TLSv1_client_method (); break; default: abort (); } ssl_ctx = SSL_CTX_new (meth); if (!ssl_ctx) goto error; SSL_CTX_set_default_verify_paths (ssl_ctx); SSL_CTX_load_verify_locations (ssl_ctx, opt.ca_cert, opt.ca_directory); /* SSL_VERIFY_NONE instructs OpenSSL not to abort SSL_connect if the certificate is invalid. We verify the certificate separately in ssl_check_certificate, which provides much better diagnostics than examining the error stack after a failed SSL_connect. */ SSL_CTX_set_verify (ssl_ctx, SSL_VERIFY_NONE, NULL); if (opt.cert_file) if (SSL_CTX_use_certificate_file (ssl_ctx, opt.cert_file, key_type_to_ssl_type (opt.cert_type)) != 1) goto error; if (opt.private_key) if (SSL_CTX_use_PrivateKey_file (ssl_ctx, opt.private_key, key_type_to_ssl_type (opt.private_key_type)) != 1) goto error; /* Since fd_write unconditionally assumes partial writes (and handles them correctly), allow them in OpenSSL. */ SSL_CTX_set_mode (ssl_ctx, SSL_MODE_ENABLE_PARTIAL_WRITE); return 1; error: if (ssl_ctx) SSL_CTX_free (ssl_ctx); print_errors (); return 0; } static int openssl_read (int fd, char *buf, int bufsize, void *ctx) { int ret; SSL *ssl = (SSL *) ctx; do ret = SSL_read (ssl, buf, bufsize); while (ret == -1 && SSL_get_error (ssl, ret) == SSL_ERROR_SYSCALL && errno == EINTR); return ret; } static int openssl_write (int fd, char *buf, int bufsize, void *ctx) { int ret = 0; SSL *ssl = (SSL *) ctx; do ret = SSL_write (ssl, buf, bufsize); while (ret == -1 && SSL_get_error (ssl, ret) == SSL_ERROR_SYSCALL && errno == EINTR); return ret; } static int openssl_poll (int fd, double timeout, int wait_for, void *ctx) { SSL *ssl = (SSL *) ctx; if (timeout == 0) return 1; if (SSL_pending (ssl)) return 1; return select_fd (fd, timeout, wait_for); } static int openssl_peek (int fd, char *buf, int bufsize, void *ctx) { int ret; SSL *ssl = (SSL *) ctx; do ret = SSL_peek (ssl, buf, bufsize); while (ret == -1 && SSL_get_error (ssl, ret) == SSL_ERROR_SYSCALL && errno == EINTR); return ret; } static void openssl_close (int fd, void *ctx) { SSL *ssl = (SSL *) ctx; SSL_shutdown (ssl); SSL_free (ssl); #ifdef WINDOWS closesocket (fd); #else close (fd); #endif DEBUGP (("Closed %d/SSL 0x%0lx\n", fd, (unsigned long) ssl)); } /* Perform the SSL handshake on file descriptor FD, which is assumed to be connected to an SSL server. The SSL handle provided by OpenSSL is registered with the file descriptor FD using fd_register_transport, so that subsequent calls to fd_read, fd_write, etc., will use the corresponding SSL functions. Returns 1 on success, 0 on failure. */ int ssl_connect (int fd) { SSL *ssl; DEBUGP (("Initiating SSL handshake.\n")); assert (ssl_ctx != NULL); ssl = SSL_new (ssl_ctx); if (!ssl) goto error; if (!SSL_set_fd (ssl, fd)) goto error; SSL_set_connect_state (ssl); if (SSL_connect (ssl) <= 0 || ssl->state != SSL_ST_OK) goto error; /* Register FD with Wget's transport layer, i.e. arrange that our functions are used for reading, writing, and polling. */ fd_register_transport (fd, openssl_read, openssl_write, openssl_poll, openssl_peek, openssl_close, ssl); DEBUGP (("Handshake successful; connected socket %d to SSL handle 0x%0*lx\n", fd, PTR_FORMAT (ssl))); return 1; error: DEBUGP (("SSL handshake failed.\n")); print_errors (); if (ssl) SSL_free (ssl); return 0; } #define ASTERISK_EXCLUDES_DOT /* mandated by rfc2818 */ /* Return 1 is STRING (case-insensitively) matches PATTERN, 0 otherwise. The recognized wildcard character is "*", which matches any character in STRING except ".". Any number of the "*" wildcard may be present in the pattern. This is used to match of hosts as indicated in rfc2818: "Names may contain the wildcard character * which is considered to match any single domain name component or component fragment. E.g., *.a.com matches foo.a.com but not bar.foo.a.com. f*.com matches foo.com but not bar.com [or foo.bar.com]." If the pattern contain no wildcards, pattern_match(a, b) is equivalent to !strcasecmp(a, b). */ static int pattern_match (const char *pattern, const char *string) { const char *p = pattern, *n = string; char c; for (; (c = TOLOWER (*p++)) != '\0'; n++) if (c == '*') { for (c = TOLOWER (*p); c == '*'; c = TOLOWER (*++p)) ; for (; *n != '\0'; n++) if (TOLOWER (*n) == c && pattern_match (p, n)) return 1; #ifdef ASTERISK_EXCLUDES_DOT else if (*n == '.') return 0; #endif return c == '\0'; } else { if (c != TOLOWER (*n)) return 0; } return *n == '\0'; } /* Verify the validity of the certificate presented by the server. Also check that the "common name" of the server, as presented by its certificate, corresponds to HOST. (HOST typically comes from the URL and is what the user thinks he's connecting to.) This assumes that ssl_connect has successfully finished, i.e. that the SSL handshake has been performed and that FD is connected to an SSL handle. If opt.check_cert is non-zero (the default), this returns 1 if the certificate is valid, 0 otherwise. If opt.check_cert is 0, the function always returns 1, but should still be called because it warns the user about any problems with the certificate. */ int ssl_check_certificate (int fd, const char *host) { X509 *cert; char common_name[256]; long vresult; int success = 1; /* If the user has specified --no-check-cert, we still want to warn him about problems with the server's certificate. */ const char *severity = opt.check_cert ? _("ERROR") : _("WARNING"); SSL *ssl = (SSL *) fd_transport_context (fd); assert (ssl != NULL); cert = SSL_get_peer_certificate (ssl); if (!cert) { logprintf (LOG_NOTQUIET, _("%s: No certificate presented by %s.\n"), severity, escnonprint (host)); success = 0; goto out; /* must bail out since CERT is NULL */ } #ifdef ENABLE_DEBUG if (opt.debug) { char *subject = X509_NAME_oneline (X509_get_subject_name (cert), 0, 0); char *issuer = X509_NAME_oneline (X509_get_issuer_name (cert), 0, 0); DEBUGP (("certificate:\n subject: %s\n issuer: %s\n", escnonprint (subject), escnonprint (issuer))); OPENSSL_free (subject); OPENSSL_free (issuer); } #endif vresult = SSL_get_verify_result (ssl); if (vresult != X509_V_OK) { /* #### We might want to print saner (and translatable) error messages for several frequently encountered errors. The candidates would include X509_V_ERR_UNABLE_TO_GET_ISSUER_CERT_LOCALLY, X509_V_ERR_SELF_SIGNED_CERT_IN_CHAIN, X509_V_ERR_DEPTH_ZERO_SELF_SIGNED_CERT, X509_V_ERR_CERT_NOT_YET_VALID, X509_V_ERR_CERT_HAS_EXPIRED, and possibly others. The current approach would still be used for the less frequent failure cases. */ logprintf (LOG_NOTQUIET, _("%s: Certificate verification error for %s: %s\n"), severity, escnonprint (host), X509_verify_cert_error_string (vresult)); success = 0; /* Fall through, so that the user is warned about *all* issues with the cert (important with --no-check-certificate.) */ } /* Check that HOST matches the common name in the certificate. #### The following remains to be done: - It should use dNSName/ipAddress subjectAltName extensions if available; according to rfc2818: "If a subjectAltName extension of type dNSName is present, that MUST be used as the identity." - When matching against common names, it should loop over all common names and choose the most specific one, i.e. the last one, not the first one, which the current code picks. - Make sure that the names are encoded as UTF-8 which, being ASCII-compatible, can be easily compared against HOST. */ common_name[0] = '\0'; X509_NAME_get_text_by_NID (X509_get_subject_name (cert), NID_commonName, common_name, sizeof (common_name)); if (!pattern_match (common_name, host)) { logprintf (LOG_NOTQUIET, _("\ %s: certificate common name `%s' doesn't match requested host name `%s'.\n"), severity, escnonprint (common_name), escnonprint (host)); success = 0; } if (success) DEBUGP (("X509 certificate successfully verified and matches host %s\n", escnonprint (host))); out: if (cert) X509_free (cert); if (opt.check_cert && !success) logprintf (LOG_NOTQUIET, _("\ To connect to %s insecurely, use `--no-check-certificate'.\n"), escnonprint (host)); /* Allow --no-check-cert to disable certificate checking. */ return opt.check_cert ? success : 1; }