All key types now have an encoding on 32 bits where the bottom 16 bits
are zero. Change to using 16 bits only.
Keep 32 bits for key types in storage, but move the significant
half-word from the top to the bottom.
Likewise, change EC curve and DH group families from 32 bits out of
which the top 8 and bottom 16 bits are zero, to 8 bits only.
Reorder psa_core_key_attributes_t to avoid padding.
Remove the values of curve encodings that are based on the TLS registry
and include the curve size, keeping only the new encoding that merely
encodes a curve family in 8 bits.
Keep the old constant names as aliases for the new values and
deprecate the old names.
Define constants for ECC curve families and DH group families. These
constants have 0x0000 in the lower 16 bits of the key type.
Support these constants in the implementation and in the PSA metadata
tests.
Switch the slot management and secure element driver HAL tests to the
new curve encodings. This requires SE driver code to become slightly
more clever when figuring out the bit-size of an imported EC key since
it now needs to take the data size into account.
Switch some documentation to the new encodings.
Remove the macro PSA_ECC_CURVE_BITS which can no longer be implemented.
Change the representation of psa_ecc_curve_t and psa_dh_group_t from
the IETF 16-bit encoding to a custom 24-bit encoding where the upper 8
bits represent a curve family and the lower 16 bits are the key size
in bits. Families are based on naming and mathematical similarity,
with sufficiently precise families that no two curves in a family have
the same bit size (for example SECP-R1 and SECP-R2 are two different
families).
As a consequence, the lower 16 bits of a key type value are always
either the key size or 0.
Internally, use the corresponding function from psa_crypto.c instead.
Externally, this function is not used in Mbed TLS and is documented as
"may change at any time".
Don't rely on the bit size encoded in the PSA curve identifier, in
preparation for removing that.
For some inputs, the error code on EC key creation changes from
PSA_ERROR_INVALID_ARGUMENT to PSA_ERROR_NOT_SUPPORTED or vice versa.
There will be further such changes in subsequent commits.
When mbedtls_x509_crt_parse_path() checks each object in the supplied path, it only processes regular files. This change makes it also accept a symlink to a file. Fixes#3005.
This was observed to be a problem on Fedora/CentOS/RHEL systems, where the ca-bundle in the default location is actually a symlink.
ssl_decompress_buf() was operating on data from the ssl context, but called at
a point where this data is actually in the rec structure. Call it later so
that the data is back to the ssl structure.
Otherwise these values are recomputed in mbedtls_rsa_deduce_crt, which
currently suffers from side channel issues in the computation of QP (see
https://eprint.iacr.org/2020/055). By loading the pre-computed values not
only is the side channel avoided, but runtime overhead of loading RSA keys
is reduced.
Discussion in https://github.com/ARMmbed/mbed-crypto/issues/347
If Y was constructed through functions in this module, then Y->n == 0
iff Y->p == NULL. However we do not prevent filling mpi structures
manually, and zero may be represented with n=0 and p a valid pointer.
Most of the code can cope with such a representation, but for the
source of mbedtls_mpi_copy, this would cause an integer underflow.
Changing the test for zero from Y->p==NULL to Y->n==0 causes this case
to work at no extra cost.
If psa_mac_finish_internal fails (which can only happen due to bad
parameters or hardware problem), the error code was converted to
PSA_ERROR_INVALID_SIGNATURE if the uninitialized stack variable
actual_mac happened to contain the expected MAC. This is a minor bug
but it may be possible to leverage it as part of a longer attack path
in some scenarios.
Reported externally. Found by static analysis.
The library style is to start with the includes corresponding to the
current module and then the rest in alphabetical order. Some modules
have several header files (eg. ssl_internal.h).
The recently added error.h includes did not respect this convention and
this commit restores it. In some cases this is not possible just by
moving the error.h declarations. This commit fixes the pre-existing
order in these instances too.
Now that the Error module has error codes as well and is processed by
the generate_errors script like any other module, we don't need to
include the header manually.
One of the error codes was already reserved, this commit just makes it
explicit. The other one is a new error code for initializing return
values in the library: `MBEDTLS_ERR_ERROR_CORRUPTION_DETECTED` should
not be returned by the library. If it is returned, then it is surely a
bug in the library or somebody is tampering with the device.
One of the error codes was already reserved, this commit just makes it
explicit. The other one is a new error code for initializing return
values in the library: `MBEDTLS_ERR_ERROR_CORRUPTION_DETECTED` should
not be returned by the library. If it is returned, then it is surely a
bug in the library or somebody is tampering with the device.
The functions mbedtls_ctr_drbg_random() and
mbedtls_ctr_drbg_random_with_add() could return 0 if an AES function
failed. This could only happen with alternative AES
implementations (the built-in implementation of the AES functions
involved never fail), typically due to a failure in a hardware
accelerator.
Bug reported and fix proposed by Johan Uppman Bruce and Christoffer
Lauri, Sectra.
Rename some macros and functions related to signature which are
changing as part of the addition of psa_sign_message and
psa_verify_message.
perl -i -pe '%t = (
PSA_KEY_USAGE_SIGN => PSA_KEY_USAGE_SIGN_HASH,
PSA_KEY_USAGE_VERIFY => PSA_KEY_USAGE_VERIFY_HASH,
PSA_ASYMMETRIC_SIGNATURE_MAX_SIZE => PSA_SIGNATURE_MAX_SIZE,
PSA_ASYMMETRIC_SIGN_OUTPUT_SIZE => PSA_SIGN_OUTPUT_SIZE,
psa_asymmetric_sign => psa_sign_hash,
psa_asymmetric_verify => psa_verify_hash,
); s/\b(@{[join("|", keys %t)]})\b/$t{$1}/ge' $(git ls-files . ':!:**/crypto_compat.h')
* origin/pr/2854:
Shorter version of mbedtls_ssl_send_fatal_handshake_failure
Resolve#2801 - remove repetitive assignment to ssl->in_msg (the first value was never used)
Resolve#2800 - move declaration to avoid unused variable warning in case MBEDTLS_SSL_PROTO_DTLS was undefined
Resolve#2717 - remove erroneous sizeof (the operator was applied to constant integer number)
In the CTR_DRBG module, add selftest data for when
MBEDTLS_CTR_DRBG_USE_128_BIT_KEY is enabled.
I generated the test data by running our own code. This is ok because
we have other tests that ensure that the algorithm is implemented
correctly.
This makes programs/self/selftest pass when
MBEDTLS_CTR_DRBG_USE_128_BIT_KEY is enabled.
First deal with deleted files.
* Files deleted by us: keep them deleted.
* Files deleted by them, whether modified by us or not: keep our version.
```
git rm $(git status -s | sed -n 's/^DU //p')
git reset -- $(git status -s | sed -n 's/^D //p')
git checkout -- $(git status -s | sed -n 's/^ D //p')
git add -- $(git status -s | sed -n 's/^UD //p')
```
Individual files with conflicts:
* `3rdparty/everest/library/Hacl_Curve25519_joined.c`: spurious conflict because git mistakenly identified this file as a rename. Keep our version.
* `README.md`: conflict due to their change in a paragraph that doesn't exist in our version. Keep our version of this paragraph.
* `docs/architecture/Makefile`: near-identical additions. Adapt the definition of `all_markdown` and include the clean target.
* `doxygen/input/docs_mainpage.h`: conflict in the version number. Keep our version number.
* `include/mbedtls/config.h`: two delete/modify conflicts. Keep the removed chunks out.
* `library/CMakeLists.txt`: discard all their changes as they are not relevant.
* `library/Makefile`:
* Discard the added chunk about the crypto submodule starting with `INCLUDING_FROM_MBEDTLS:=1`.
* delete/modify: keep the removed chunk out.
* library build: This is almost delete/modify. Their changes are mostly not applicable. Do keep the `libmbedcrypto.$(DLEXT): | libmbedcrypto.a` order dependency.
* `.c.o`: `-o` was added on both sides but in a different place. Change to their place.
* `library/error.c`: to be regenerated.
* `library/version_features.c`: to be regenerated.
* `programs/Makefile`: Most of the changes are not relevant. The one relevant change is in the `clean` target for Windows; adapt it by removing `/S` from our version.
* `programs/test/query_config.c`: to be regenerated.
* `scripts/config.py`: added in parallel on both sides. Keep our version.
* `scripts/footprint.sh`: parallel changes. Keep our version.
* `scripts/generate_visualc_files.pl`: one delete/modify conflict. Keep the removed chunks out.
* `tests/Makefile`: discard all of their changes.
* `tests/scripts/all.sh`:
* `pre_initialize_variables` add `append_outcome`: add it.
* `pre_initialize_variables` add `ASAN_CFLAGS`: already there, keep our version.
* `pre_parse_command_line` add `--no-append-outcome`: add it.
* `pre_parse_command_line` add `--outcome-file`: add it.
* `pre_print_configuration`: add `MBEDTLS_TEST_OUTCOME_FILE`.
* Several changes in SSL-specific components: keep our version without them.
* Several changes where `config.pl` was changed to `config.py` and there was an adjacent difference: keep our version.
* Changes regarding the inclusion of `MBEDTLS_MEMORY_xxx`: ignore them here, they will be normalized in a subsequent commit.
* `component_test_full_cmake_gcc_asan`: add it without the TLS tests.
* `component_test_no_use_psa_crypto_full_cmake_asan`: keep the fixed `msg`, discard other changes.
* `component_test_memory_buffer_allocator_backtrace`, `component_test_memory_buffer_allocator`: add them without the TLS tests.
* `component_test_m32_everest`: added in parallel on both sides. Keep our version.
* `tests/scripts/check-names.sh`, `tests/scripts/list-enum-consts.pl`, `tests/scripts/list-identifiers.sh`, ``tests/scripts/list-macros.sh`: discard all of their changes.
* `tests/scripts/test-ref-configs.pl`: the change in the conflict is not relevant, so keep our version there.
* `visualc/VS2010/*.vcxproj`: to be regenerated.
Regenerate files:
```
scripts/generate_visualc_files.pl
git add visualc/VS2010/*.vcxproj
scripts/generate_errors.pl
git add library/error.c
scripts/generate_features.pl
git add library/version_features.c
scripts/generate_query_config.pl
git add programs/test/query_config.c
```
Rejected changes in non-conflicting files:
* `CMakeLists.txt`: discard their addition which has already been side-ported.
* `doxygen/mbedtls.doxyfile`: keep the version number change. Discard the changes related to `../crypto` paths.
Keep the following changes after examination:
* `.travis.yml`: all of their changes are relevant.
* `include/mbedtls/error.h`: do keep their changes. Even though Crypto doesn't use TLS errors, it must not encroach on TLS's allocated numbers.
* `tests/scripts/check-test-cases.py`: keep the code dealing with `ssl-opt.sh`. It works correctly when the file is not present.
Using 4096 bytes of stack for the temporary buffer used for holding a
throw-away DER-formatted CSR limits the portability of generating
certificate signing requests to only devices with lots of stack space.
To increase portability, use the mbedtls_pem_write_buffer() in-place
capability instead, using the same buffer for input and output. This
works since the DER encoding for some given data is always smaller than
that same data PEM-encoded.
PEM format is desirable to use even on stack-constrained devices as the
format is easy to work with (for example, copy-pasting from a tiny
device's serial console output, for CSRs generated on tiny devices
without the private key leaving said tiny device).
mbedtls_pk_sign does not take the size of its output buffer as a
parameter. We guarantee that MBEDTLS_PK_SIGNATURE_MAX_SIZE is enough.
For RSA and ECDSA signatures made in software, this is ensured by the
way MBEDTLS_PK_SIGNATURE_MAX_SIZE is defined at compile time. For
signatures made through RSA-alt and PSA, this is not guaranteed
robustly at compile time, but we can test it at runtime, so do that.
This issue has been reported by Tuba Yavuz, Farhaan Fowze, Ken (Yihang) Bai,
Grant Hernandez, and Kevin Butler (University of Florida) and
Dave Tian (Purdue University).
In AES encrypt and decrypt some variables were left on the stack. The value
of these variables can be used to recover the last round key. To follow best
practice and to limit the impact of buffer overread vulnerabilities (like
Heartbleed) we need to zeroize them before exiting the function.
When writing a private EC key, use a constant size for the private
value, as specified in RFC 5915. Previously, the value was written
as an ASN.1 INTEGER, which caused the size of the key to leak
about 1 bit of information on average, and could cause the value to be
1 byte too large for the output buffer.
In the case of *ret we might need to preserve a 0 value throughout the
loop and therefore we need an extra condition to protect it from being
overwritten.
The value of done is always 1 after *ret has been set and does not need
to be protected from overwriting. Therefore in this case the extra
condition can be removed.
The code relied on the assumptions that CHAR_BIT is 8 and that unsigned
does not have padding bits.
In the Bignum module we already assume that the sign of an MPI is either
-1 or 1. Using this, we eliminate the above mentioned dependency.
The signature of mbedtls_mpi_cmp_mpi_ct() meant to support using it in
place of mbedtls_mpi_cmp_mpi(). This meant full comparison functionality
and a signed result.
To make the function more universal and friendly to constant time
coding, we change the result type to unsigned. Theoretically, we could
encode the comparison result in an unsigned value, but it would be less
intuitive.
Therefore we won't be able to represent the result as unsigned anymore
and the functionality will be constrained to checking if the first
operand is less than the second. This is sufficient to support the
current use case and to check any relationship between MPIs.
The only drawback is that we need to call the function twice when
checking for equality, but this can be optimised later if an when it is
needed.
Multiplication is known to have measurable timing variations based on
the operands. For example it typically is much faster if one of the
operands is zero. Remove them from constant time code.