Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
|
Preferably customized cipher suites will be based on the default value.
But all may be used as base and hence it will be good to
handle anonymous suites separately as they are intended for testing purposes.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
If no SNI is available and the hostname is an IP-address also check
for IP-address match. This check is not as good as a DNS hostname check
and certificates using IP-address are not recommended.
|
|
|
|
When the server_name_indication is sent automatize the
clients check of that the hostname is present in the
servers certificate. Currently server_name_indication shall
be on the dns_id format. If server_name_indication is disabled
it is up to the user to do its own check in the verify_fun.
|
|
|
|
Add session_id and remove undocumented ssl:session_info/1
Add client_random, server_random and master_secret, they will not be included
in ssl:connection_information/1 as they may affect the connections security if
used recklessly.
|
|
If a handshake message is really big it could happen that the ssl
process would hang due to failing of requesting more data from the
socket. This has been fixed.
Also added option to limit max handshake size. It has a default
value that should be big enough to handle normal usage and small
enough to mitigate DoS attacks.
|
|
As per RFC 4492 Sec 5.1, the preferred order of selection of named
curves is based on client preferences.
Currently, the SSL application only picks entries according to the
absolute order of entries as tracked in a hardcoded list in code.
This patch changes things so that the client-specified order is
preferred. It also allows a mode where the server can be configured to
override the client's preferred order with its own, although the chosen
ECC must still be within both lists.
The configuration is done through the following options:
- `eccs`, shared by clients and servers alike, allows the specification
of the supported named curves, in their preferred order, and may
eventually support more values for explicit primes and so on.
- `honor_ecc_order`, a server-only option, is similar to
`honor_cipher_order` and will, by default let the server pick the
client-preferred ECC, and otherwise pick the server-preferred one.
The default value for `eccs` is the same as before, although the
server-chosen ECC now defaults to the client rather than previous
choice.
A function `ssl:eccs()` has been added that returns the highest
supported ECCs for the library.
|
|
|
|
|
|
* legoscia/ssl_crl_hash_dir-bis/PR-982/OTP-13530:
Skip crl_hash_dir_expired test for LibreSSL
Add ssl_crl_hash_dir module
Function for generating OpenSSL-style name hashes
Add public_key:pkix_match_dist_point
Improve formatting for crl_{check,cache} options
Add issuer arg to ssl_crl_cache_api lookup callback
Conflicts:
lib/public_key/test/public_key_SUITE.erl
|
|
These functions call getstat on the underlying TCP socket.
The only way to do this before now was to use a hack, either
by looking inside the #sslsocket{} record directly, or by
not using the SSL listen/accept functions and upgrading
from a TCP socket that is kept around for the purpose of
calling getstat later on.
|
|
* ingela/ssl/phase-out-sslv2-hello/OTP-13465:
ssl: Add option to phase out support for sslv2 client hello
|
|
ssl servers can recognize sslv2 client hellos to interop with clients
that support higher version of SSL/TLS but also offers sslv2
Conflicts:
lib/ssl/src/tls_connection.erl
|
|
|
|
Some legacy TLS 1.0 software does not tolerate the 1/n-1 content
split BEAST mitigation technique. This commit adds a beast_mitigation
SSL option (defaulting to one_n_minus_one) to select or disable the
BEAST mitigation technique.
Valid option values are (one_n_minus_one | zero_n | disabled).
|
|
* henrik/update-copyrightyear:
update copyright-year
|
|
|
|
In TLS-1.2 The signature algorithm and the hash function algorithm
used to produce the digest that is used when creating the digital signature
may be negotiated through the signature algorithm extension RFC 5246.
We want to make these algorithm pairs configurable.
In connections using lower versions of TLS these algorithms are
implicit defined and can not be negotiated or configured.
DTLS is updated to not cause dialyzer errors, but needs to get a real
implementation later.
|
|
This module is an implementation of the ssl_crl_cache_api behaviour.
It can be used when there is a directory containing CRLs for all
relevant CAs, in the form used by e.g. Apache. The module assumes
that the directory is being updated through an external process.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
* legoscia/critical-extension-verify-none:
ssl: with verify_none, accept critical extensions
OTP-13377
|
|
Make sure that options only relevant for one role (client|server) is set
to undefined when the other role is invoked. As there are many options to
ssl, and many are optional, we choose to filter out all undefined options
to avoid overwhelming the user with not relevant information.
This way there is no need for any special handling of the role specific options
which is also nice.
|
|
* legoscia/ssl-doc-typos:
Fix typos in ssl.xml
OTP-13339
|
|
When establishing a TLS connection with {verify, verify_none}, if the
server has a certificate with a critical extension, for example a
"Netscape Cert Type" extension, certificate verification would fail,
which is surprising given that the name of the option suggests that no
verification would be performed.
With this change, certificate extensions marked as critical are
ignored when using verify_none.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Add possibility to downgrade an SSL/TLS connection to a tcp connection,
and give back the socket control to a user process.
Add application setting to be able to change fatal alert shutdown
timeout, also shorten the default timeout. The fatal alert timeout is
the number of milliseconds between sending of a fatal alert and
closing the connection. Waiting a little while improves the
peers chances to properly receiving the alert so it may
shutdown gracefully.
|
|
Correct merge that went wrong.
|
|
|
|
|
|
* ferd/deny-client-renegotiation:
Add disable client-initiated renegotiation option
Conflicts:
lib/ssl/doc/src/ssl.xml
lib/ssl/src/ssl.erl
OTP-12815
|
|
Client-initiated renegotiation is more costly for the server than the
client, and this feature can be abused in denial of service attempts.
Although the ssl application already takes counter-measure for these
(via cooldown periods between renegotiations), it can be useful to
disable the feature entirely.
This patch adds the `{client_renegotiation, boolean()}' option to the
server-side of the SSL application (defaulting to `true' to be
compatible with the current behaviour).
The option disables the ability to do any renegotiation at all in the
protocol's state, reusing the existing denial code, but without opening
the code path that sets up a timed message to eventually reopen it up.
|
|
|
|
The newly added function sni_fun allows dynamic update of SSL options
like keys and certificates depending on different SNI hostname, rather
than a predefined rules of SSL options.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Make sure that links from ssl to public_key work.
OTP-12670 - Ignoring 1.2 extension in 1.0 or TLS-1.1
solved by 5edda23ee854038c9d4bcddd0d676ee0ffd20da5
is mentioned here to make the release scripts happy,
as the branch solving this accidently had a name ending 1267
instead of 12670
|
|
|
|
|
|
ssl SSL
crypto Crypto
stdlib STDLIB
kernel Kernel
public_key Public Key
|
|
|