Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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We want to be able to save a specific session to reuse, and make sure
it is reusable immediatly when the connection has been established.
Add client option {reuse_session, SessionID::binary()}
We also do not want clients to save sessions that it did not verify.
Additionaly change behaviour of the client and server to not save sessions
if reuse_session is set to false.
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With the new TLS sender process, solving ERL-622, TLS ALERTs sent in
the connection state must be encrypted and sent by the TLS sender
process. This to make sure that the correct encryption state is used
to encode the ALERTS. Care must also be taken to ensure a graceful
close down behavior both for normal shutdown and downgrading from TLS
to TCP.
The original TR ERL-738 is verified by cowboy tests, and close down
behavior by our tests. However we alas have not been able to yet
create a minimal test case for the originating problem.
Also it seems it has become less likely that we run in to the TCP
delivery problem, that is the guarantee is only on transport level,
not application level. Keep work around function in ssl_test_lib but
we can have better test as long as we do not get to much wobbling
tests.
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Otherwhise test can be wrongly initialized and will fail as they try to run
with a broken setup.
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Consolidate code that logs TLS/DTLS version during testing
into ssl_test_lib.
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* ia/ssl/modern-timetrap:
ssl: Make init functions fail if make_certs:all fails
ssl: Avoid sleep
ssl: modernize timetrap handling
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Watchdog is legacy test_server use only ct:timetrap/1
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The test cases does not use any hooks and including the ts_install_cth
trips up the test case setup on some platforms cuasing the test cases
to fail with {error, enoent}
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connection_info -> connection_information
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This commit adds support for RFC7301, application-layer protocol
negotiation. ALPN is the standard based approach to the NPN
extension, and is required for HTTP/2.
ALPN lives side by side with NPN and provides an equivalent
feature but in this case it is the server that decides what
protocol to use, not the client.
When both ALPN and NPN are sent by a client, and the server is
configured with both ALPN and NPN options, ALPN will always
take precedence. This behavior can also be found in the OpenSSL
implementation of ALPN.
ALPN and NPN share the ssl:negotiated_protocol/1 function for
retrieving the negotiated protocol. The previously existing
function ssl:negotiated_next_protocol/1 still exists, but has
been deprecated and removed from the documentation.
The tests against OpenSSL require OpenSSL version 1.0.2+.
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