Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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In ssl-4.1.5 temporary clean-up processes would crash resulting in
that the session table would not be cleaned up (e.i. using more and
more memory) and error reports would be printed, but connections would
not be affected.
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that a session not be resumed. This is a change from TLS 1.0 to
conform with widespread implementation practice. Erlang ssl will now
in TLS 1.0 conform to the widespread implementation practice instead
of the specification to avoid performance issues.
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Filipe David Manana
OTP-9114: [ftp] Added (type) spec for all exported functions.
OTP-9123: mod_esi:deliver/2 made to accept binary data.
Bernard Duggan
OTP-9124: [httpd] Prevent XSS in error pages.
Michael Santos
OTP-9131: [httpd] Wrong security property names used in documentation.
Garrett Smith
OTP-9157: [httpd] Improved error messages.
Ricardo Catalinas Jim�nez
OTP-9158: [httpd] Fix timeout message generated by mod_esi.
Bernard Duggan
OTP-9202: [httpd] Extended support for file descriptors.
Attila Rajmund Nohl
OTP-9230: The default ssl kind has now been changed to essl.
OTP-9246: [httpc] httpc manager crash because of a handler retry
race condition.
Merge branch 'bmk/inets/inet56_integration' into dev
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Invalidation of a session for reusing should first flag that the
session may no longer be reused and then later when all possible
pending reuses have been handled delete the session from the
database. This could otherwise cause the client to terminate due to
{badarg,[{erlang,byte_size,[undefined]}, and the server to terminate due to
{{badmatch,{resumed,undefined}}.
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reason badarg. Neither SSL nor INETS catches this, resulting in crashes
with incomprehensible reasons.
OTP-9289
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reason badarg. Neither SSL nor INETS catches this, resulting in crashes
with incomprehensible reasons.
OTP-9289
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ssl:send/2 takes iodata() as a second
argument. erlang:iolist_to_binary should really be called
erlang:iodata_to_binary which caused the mismatch in the first place.
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* ia/public_key/encode-decode-ssh/OTP-9144:
Implemented encode/decode support for ssh public key files
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* ia/ssl/prepare-release:
Prepare for release
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When making an SSL connection (either as client or as server), the
process implementing the connection may use as much as hundreds of
kilobytes of memory, even when idle. This is problematic for any
application maintaining more than just a few SSL connections.
This patch introduces the option { hibernate_after, int() } to the
ssl:connect and ssl:listen functions, making the SSL connection
process go into hibernation after the specified number of milliseconds
of inactivity. This will reduce the memory used by the process to
just a few hundred bytes, making applications with thousands or
more SSL connections feasible, as long as most of the connections
are idle for most of the time (which is typically the case).
The approach of making the process go into hibernation only after
some time of inactivity was chosen because hibernation incurs some
CPU usage, and it is therefore not desirable for a process to
hibernate after each call.
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Suppressed dialyzer warnings with spec if possible to
minimize clutter from this file belonging to old ssl.
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maint-r14
* ia/ssl/unknown-extension-handling-verify-none/OTP-9029:
Prepare for release
Verification of a critical extended_key_usage-extension corrected
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When a verify fun is supplied, it should not be called to verify
the extended_key_usage-extension when it is already verified
by the ssl_certificate:validate_extension/2
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Handshake hashes, premaster secret and "public_key_info" does not need
to be saved when the connection has been established. The own certificate is
no longer duplicated in the state.
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-------------------------------------------------------------------------
ssl's published documentation states:
ssl_accept(ListenSocket) ->
ssl_accept(ListenSocket, Timeout) -> ok | {error, Reason}
(see http://www.erlang.org/doc/man/ssl.html#ssl_accept-1)
while its code has the specs:
-spec ssl_accept(#sslsocket{}) -> {ok, #sslsocket{}} | {error, reason()}.
-spec ssl_accept(#sslsocket{}, list() | timeout()) -> {ok, #sslsocket{}} | {error, reason()}.
One of the two cannot be right. This should be fixed.
Moreover, I do not see why the spec just mentions list() for the options when the documentation explicitly mentions the options of ssl.
Kostis
---------------------------------------------------------------------
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The previous code happened to worked if the select-statment returned
only on entry.
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Added cache invalidation control of ssl certificates so that
sessions will not be reused if file content is changed.
There was a glitch in ssl:close that made it possible to
to get eaddrinuse even though reuseadder-option was used.
Also improved tests for better user-close handling.
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Data to sign and verify should be inputed as binaries.
Also cleaned up and moved some dialyzer specs.
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Also changed alert to BAD_RECORD_MAC as:
"differentiating between bad_record_mac and decryption_failed alerts
may permit certain attacks against CBC mode as used in TLS
[CBCATT]. It is preferable to uniformly use the bad_record_mac
alert to hide the specific type of the error."
Also cleaned up the code and changed a few other alert reasons in
according to alert descriptions in the TLS RFC 4346. And added function
terminate_alert/3 so that we can differentiate between a crash
in ssl (a bug in our code) and a crash in the application using ssl.
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Also fixed incorrect dialyzer spec.
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* ia/ssl/certificate-verify/wrong-key-method/OTP-8897:
Correct handling of client certificate verify message
Conflicts:
lib/ssl/src/ssl_handshake.erl
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When checking the client certificate verify message the server used
the wrong algorithm identifier to determine the signing algorithm,
causing a function clause error in the public_key application when the
key-exchange algorithm and the public key algorithm of the client
certificate happen to differ.
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For testing purposes ssl now also support some anonymous cipher suites
when explicitly configured to do so.
Also moved session cache tests to its own suite, so that timeout
of end_per_testcase when the mnesia is used as session cache will
not affect other test cases.
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Conflicts:
lib/public_key/src/pubkey_cert.erl
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maint-r14
* ia/ssl-and-public_key/verify_fun_peer_awarness/OTP-8873:
Peer awarness
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Changed the verify fun so that it differentiate between the peer
certificate and CA certificates by using valid_peer or valid as the
second argument to the verify fun. It may not always be trivial or
even possible to know when the peer certificate is reached otherwise.
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* ia/ssl-and-public_key/backwards-compatibility/OTP-8858:
Backwards compatibility
Conflicts:
lib/ssl/src/ssl_certificate_db.erl
Use short INFO-message. Debugging information can be fairly
easily recreated so we do not want to clutter the logs.
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Changed implementation to retain backwards compatibility for old
option {verify, 0} that shall be equivalent to {verify, verify_none},
also separate the cases unknown CA and selfsigned peer cert, and
restored return value of deprecated function public_key:pem_to_der/1.
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DSS-Params may be null in a certificate as it can inherit the
parameters.
Also ignore CA-certs that do not follow ASN-1 spec in RFC 5280.
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Added the functionality so that the verification fun will be called
when a certificate is considered valid by the path validation to allow
access to eachs certificate in the path to the user application.
Removed clause that only check that a extension is not critical,
it does alter the verification rusult only withholds information from
the application.
Try to verify subject-AltName, if unable to verify it let
application try.
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Changed the behavior of the verify_fun option so that
the application can be responsible for handling path validation
errors even on the server side. Also replaced the not yet
documented validate_extensions_fun to be handled by the
verify_fun instead.
If the verify callback fun returns {fail, Reason}, the verification process is
immediately stopped and an alert is sent to the peer and the TLS/SSL
handshake is terminated. If the verify callback fun returns {valid,
UserState}, the verification process is continued. If the verify callback
fun always returns {valid, UserState}, the TLS/SSL handshake will not be
terminated with respect to verification failures and the connection
will be established. The verify callback fun will also be
able to verify application specific extensions.
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