The client previously reproted the offered ciphersuites through
their numerical identifier only, while the server reported them
through their name.
This commit modifies the debug output on client and server to
both use the format `ID (NAME)` for the ciphersuites.
* development: (55 commits)
Log change as bugfix
Add changelog entry
Clarify updates to the persistent state in storage
With multiple applicable transparent drivers, the order is unspecified
Minor clarifications
Give some examples of purpsoses of pure-software transparent driver
Fix typos
Add a link to the PSA API specification
Explain locations vs lifetimes
Initialize key pointer in ecdh to NULL
Add buffer zeroization when ecp_write_key fails
Simplified key slot deletion
Style fixes
Use arc4random_buf instead of rand on NetBSD
Apply review feedback
Update open question section about public key storage
Remove the paragraph about declaring application needs
Change driver persistent data to a callback interface
Rework and expand key management in opaque drivers
Fix typos and copypasta
...
Since it is being dereferenced by free on exit it should be inited to NULL.
Also added a small test that would trigger the issue.
Signed-off-by: Steven Cooreman <steven.cooreman@silabs.com>
* return is treated as a function call
* space between opening and closing parentheses
* remove whiteline between assignment and checking of same variable
Signed-off-by: Steven Cooreman <steven.cooreman@silabs.com>
* No need to check for NULL before free'ing
* No need to reset variables that weren't touched
* Set output buffer to zero if key output fails
* Document internal functions and rearrange order of input arguments to
better match other functions.
* Clean up Montgomery fix to be less verbose code
Signed-off-by: Steven Cooreman <steven.cooreman@silabs.com>
PSA Crypto was checking the byte length of a to-be-imported public ECP key
against the expected length for Weierstrass keys, forgetting that
Curve25519/Curve448 exists.
Signed-off-by: Steven Cooreman <steven.cooreman@silabs.com>
Avoids stack-allocating a key slot during ECDH, and mock-attaching a
key to a key slot during key import.
Signed-off-by: Steven Cooreman <steven.cooreman@silabs.com>
* No null-check before calling free
* Close memory leak
* No need for double check of privkey validity
Signed-off-by: Steven Cooreman <steven.cooreman@silabs.com>
* Allocate internal representation contexts on the heap (i.e. don't change
where they're being allocated)
* Unify load_xxx_representation in terms of allocation and init behaviour
Signed-off-by: Steven Cooreman <steven.cooreman@silabs.com>
* Updated wording
* Split out buffer allocation to a convenience function
* Moved variable declarations to beginning of their code block
Signed-off-by: Steven Cooreman <steven.cooreman@silabs.com>
Now that both ECP and RSA keys are represented in export representation,
they can be treated more uniformly.
Signed-off-by: Steven Cooreman <steven.cooreman@silabs.com>
Change to on-demand loading of the internal representation when required
in order to call an mbed TLS cryptography API.
Signed-off-by: Steven Cooreman <steven.cooreman@silabs.com>
Change to on-demand loading of the internal representation when required
in order to call an mbed TLS cryptography API.
Signed-off-by: Steven Cooreman <steven.cooreman@silabs.com>
In preparation for the implementation of the accelerator APIs. This is
ramping up to the goal of only storing the export representation in the
key slot, and not keeping the crypto implementation-specific representations
around.
Signed-off-by: Steven Cooreman <steven.cooreman@silabs.com>
Run some self-test both for a short Weierstrass curve and for a
Montgomery curve, if the build-time configuration includes a curve of
both types. Run both because there are significant differences in the
implementation.
The test data is suitable for Curve25519.
Signed-off-by: Gilles Peskine <gilles.peskine@arm.com>
The constants used in the test worked with every supported curve
except secp192k1. For secp192k1, the "N-1" exponent was too large.
Signed-off-by: Gilles Peskine <gilles.peskine@arm.com>
For some curves (semi-coincidentally, short Weierstrass curves), the
ECP module calculates some group parameters dynamically. Build the
code to calculate the parameters only if a relevant curve is enabled.
This fixes an unused function warning when building with only
Montgomery curves.
Signed-off-by: Gilles Peskine <gilles.peskine@arm.com>
Replace the now-redundant internal curve type macros ECP_xxx by the
macros MBEDTLS_ECP__xxx_ENABLED which are declared in ecp.h.
Signed-off-by: Gilles Peskine <gilles.peskine@arm.com>
Document that mbedtls_ecp_muladd and mbedtls_ecp_muladd_restartable
are only implemented on short Weierstrass curves.
Exclude these functions at build time if no short Weierstrass curve
is included in the build. Before, these functions failed to compile in
such a configuration.
Signed-off-by: Gilles Peskine <gilles.peskine@arm.com>
In the entries (mbedtls_x509_crl_entry values) on the list constructed
by mbedtls_x509_crl_parse_der(), set entry->raw.tag to
(SEQUENCE | CONSTRUCTED) rather than to the tag of the first ASN.1
element of the entry (which happens to be the tag of the serial
number, so INTEGER or INTEGER | CONTEXT_SPECIFIC). This is doesn't
really matter in practice (and in particular the value is never used
in Mbed TLS itself), and isn't documented, but at least it's
consistent with how mbedtls_x509_buf is normally used.
The primary importance of this change is that the old code tried to
access the tag of the first element of the entry even when the entry
happened to be empty. If the entry was empty and not followed by
anything else in the CRL, this could cause a read 1 byte after the end
of the buffer containing the CRL.
The test case "X509 CRL ASN1 (TBSCertList, single empty entry at end)"
hit the problematic buffer overflow, which is detected with ASan.
Credit to OSS-Fuzz for detecting the problem.
Signed-off-by: Gilles Peskine <Gilles.Peskine@arm.com>
This option allows to test the constant-flow nature of selected code, using
MemSan and the fundamental observation behind ctgrind that the set of
operations allowed on undefined memory by dynamic analysers is the same as the
set of operations allowed on secret data to avoid leaking it to a local
attacker via side channels, namely, any operation except branching and
dereferencing.
(This isn't the full story, as on some CPUs some instructions have variable
execution depending on the inputs, most notably division and on some cores
multiplication. However, testing that no branch or memory access depends on
secret data is already a good start.)
Signed-off-by: Manuel Pégourié-Gonnard <manuel.pegourie-gonnard@arm.com>
The test function now depends on MBEDTLS_TEST_HOOKS, which is enabled by
config.py full, and since there are already components in all.sh exercising
the full config, this test function is sill exercised even with this new
dependency.
Since this is the first time a test function depends on MBEDTLS_TEST_HOOKS,
fix a bug in check-names.sh that wasn't apparent so far: headers from
library/*.h were not considered when looking for macro definitions. This
became apparent because MBEDTLS_STATIC_TESTABLE is defined in library/common.h
and started being used in library/ssl_msg.c, so was flagged as a likely typo.
Signed-off-by: Manuel Pégourié-Gonnard <manuel.pegourie-gonnard@arm.com>
Just move code from ssl_decrypt_buf() to the new cf_hmac() function and then
call cf_hmac() from there.
This makes the new cf_hmac() function used, opening the door for making it
static in the next commit. It also validates that its interface works for
using it in ssl_decrypt_buf().
Signed-off-by: Manuel Pégourié-Gonnard <manuel.pegourie-gonnard@arm.com>
The dummy implementation is not constant-flow at all for now, it's just
here as a starting point and a support for developing the tests and putting
the infrastructure in place.
Depending on the implementation strategy, there might be various corner cases
depending on where the lengths fall relative to block boundaries. So it seems
safer to just test all possible lengths in a given range than to use only a
few randomly-chosen values.
Signed-off-by: Manuel Pégourié-Gonnard <manuel.pegourie-gonnard@arm.com>
The condition is a complex and repeated a few times. There were already some
inconsistencies in the repetitions as some of them forgot about DES.
Signed-off-by: Manuel Pégourié-Gonnard <manuel.pegourie-gonnard@arm.com>
Address remaining PR comments for #2118
- Add ChangeLog.d/x509write_csr_heap_alloc.txt.
- Fix parameter alignment per Gille's recommendation.
- Update comments to more explicitly describe the manipulation of buf.
- Replace use of `MBEDTLS_MPI_MAX_SIZE` as `sig` buffer size for
call to `x509write_csr_der_internal()` with more intuitive
`MBEDTLS_PK_SIGNATURE_MAX_SIZE`.
- Update `mbedtls_x509write_csr_der()` to return
`MBEDTLS_ERR_X509_ALLOC_FAILED` on mbedtls_calloc error.
Signed-off-by: Simon Leet <simon.leet@microsoft.com>
Using a stack-buffer with a size > 2K could easily produce a stack
overflow for an embedded device which has a limited stack size.
This commit dynamically allocates the large CSR buffer.
This commit avoids using a temporary buffer for storing the OIDs.
A single buffer is used:
a) OIDs are written backwards starting with the end of the buffer;
b) OIDs are memmove'd to the beginning of the buffer;
c) signature over this OIDs is computed and written backwards from the
end of the buffer;
d) the two memory regions are compacted.
Signed-off-by: Doru Gucea <doru-cristian.gucea@nxp.com>
PSA_ALG_ECB_NO_PADDING came in to the PSA Crypto API spec v1.0.0, but
was not implemented yet in the mbed TLS implementation.
Signed-off-by: Steven Cooreman <steven.cooreman@silabs.com>
Changed PSA core (and PKWrite) from reaching into MPI to using the proper
ecp function to fetch a private key.
Added changelog.
Signed-off-by: Steven Cooreman <steven.cooreman@silabs.com>
mbedtls_ecp_write_key is a mirror function to mbedtls_ecp_read_key, which
writes a private key back into a byte buffer in the correct format.
This is a helpful convenience function, since the byte order is defined
differently between Montgomery and Weierstrass curves. Since this difference
is accounted for in mbedtls_ecp_read_key, it made sense to add
mbedtls_ecp_write_key for the purpose of abstracting this away such that
psa_export_key doesn't need to take byte order into account.
Signed-off-by: Steven Cooreman <steven.cooreman@silabs.com>
Rename PSA_ECC_CURVE_xxx to PSA_ECC_FAMILY_xxx, also rename
PSA_KEY_TYPE_GET_CURVE to PSA_KEY_TYPE_ECC_GET_FAMILY and rename
psa_ecc_curve_t to psa_ecc_family_t. Old defines are provided in
include/crypto_compat.h for backward compatibility.
Signed-off-by: Paul Elliott <paul.elliott@arm.com>
"Include the library directory for the sake of 3rdparty" did the job
for Make and Visual Studio. This commit does the job for CMake.
Signed-off-by: Gilles Peskine <Gilles.Peskine@arm.com>
All libraries (should) rely on the same directory structure. Instead of
repeating the same clauses 6 times (3 libraries times 2 build modes), set
the include paths, compile definitions and install instructions with a
single piece of code.
Include the 3rdparty directory for all libraries, not just crypto. It's
currently only needed for crypto, but that's just happenstance.
Signed-off-by: Gilles Peskine <Gilles.Peskine@arm.com>
In library source files, include "common.h", which takes care of
including "mbedtls/config.h" (or the alternative MBEDTLS_CONFIG_FILE)
and other things that are used throughout the library.
FROM=$'#if !defined(MBEDTLS_CONFIG_FILE)\n#include "mbedtls/config.h"\n#else\n#include MBEDTLS_CONFIG_FILE\n#endif' perl -i -0777 -pe 's~\Q$ENV{FROM}~#include "common.h"~' library/*.c 3rdparty/*/library/*.c scripts/data_files/error.fmt scripts/data_files/version_features.fmt
Signed-off-by: Gilles Peskine <Gilles.Peskine@arm.com>
When compiling library files under `3rdparty/`, the directory containing
the `.c` file that is being compiled is not the current directory, so
headers from the `library/` directory are not found. Fix this by
adding `.` to the include path.
This was not detected until now because as of this commit, no 3rdparty
source file requires a header under `library/`.
Signed-off-by: Gilles Peskine <Gilles.Peskine@arm.com>
Executed "./scripts/bump_version.sh --version 2.23.0 --so-crypto 5"
A symbol has been removed from the mbedcrypto library since the last
release:
mbedtls_ecc_group_to_psa ( enum mbedtls_ecp_group_id grpid,
size_t* bits )
This is an ABI break and we need to increase the SO version.
Signed-off-by: Janos Follath <janos.follath@arm.com>
inv_mod() already returns a specific error code if the value is not
invertible, so no need to check in advance that it is. Also, this is a
preparation for blinding the call to inv_mod(), which is made easier by
avoiding the redundancy (otherwise the call to gcd() would need to be blinded
too).
Signed-off-by: Manuel Pégourié-Gonnard <manuel.pegourie-gonnard@arm.com>
In the next commit, we'll need to draw a second random value, in order to
blind modular inversion. Having a function for that will avoid repetition.
Signed-off-by: Manuel Pégourié-Gonnard <manuel.pegourie-gonnard@arm.com>
* development: (87 commits)
entropy: Adjust parameter type of internal function to avoid a cast
entropy: Avoid arithmetic on void pointer
add comment about potential future extension
Adjust comments about SEED synchronisation
entropy: Rename sysctl_wrapper to sysctl_arnd_wrapper
test_suite_x509parse.function improvement
Pass "certificate policies" extension to callback
Update iv and len context pointers manually when reallocating buffers
Add Apache-2.0 headers to all source files
Remove Dangerous Parameter Passing
Add Apache-2.0 headers to all scripts
Add missing copyright dates to scripts and sources
Show failure in ssl-opts.sh when key export fails
Add changelog entry
tests: Reformating due to rnd_* renaming
tests: Add mbedtls_test_ prefix to rnd_* symbols
tests: Reformating due to hexcmp() renaming
tests: Add mbedtls_test_ prefix to hexcmp()
tests: Reformating due to unhexify_alloc() renaming
tests: Add mbedtls_test_ prefix to unhexify_alloc()
...
Don't define anymore globally third party include
directories and compile definitions. Declare them within the
scope of the crypto library target as per the third party
source files.
Note that targets linking to the crypto library inherit from
the third party public include directories.
Signed-off-by: Ronald Cron <ronald.cron@arm.com>
While this is a static function, so right now we know we don't need the check,
things may change in the future, so better be on the safe side.
Signed-off-by: Manuel Pégourié-Gonnard <manuel.pegourie-gonnard@arm.com>
CTR-DRBG and HMAC-DRBG may used the seed differently depending on its length.
To avoid leaks, pass them a constant-length seed.
Signed-off-by: Manuel Pégourié-Gonnard <manuel.pegourie-gonnard@arm.com>
Pass the "certificate policies" extension to the callback supplied to
mbedtls_x509_crt_parse_der_with_ext_cb() if it contains unsupported
policies. This allows the callback to fully replicate the behaviour
of the deprecated MBEDTLS_X509_ALLOW_UNSUPPORTED_CRITICAL_EXTENSION
configuration.
Signed-off-by: Nicola Di Lieto <nicola.dilieto@gmail.com>
These fields might be shifted accordingly in `ssl_parse_record_header()`
when receiving a connection with CID, so they require a manual update
after calling the generic `mbedtls_ssl_reset_in_out_pointers()`.
This commit also adds a regression test which is run by all.sh.
Signed-off-by: Andrzej Kurek <andrzej.kurek@arm.com>
Also normalize the first line of the copyright headers.
This commit was generated using the following script:
# ========================
#!/bin/sh
# Find scripts
find -path './.git' -prune -o '(' -name '*.c' -o -name '*.cpp' -o -name '*.fmt' -o -name '*.h' ')' -print | xargs sed -i '
# Normalize the first line of the copyright headers (no text on the first line of a block comment)
/^\/\*.*Copyright.*Arm/I {
i\
/*
s/^\// /
}
/Copyright.*Arm/I {
# Print copyright declaration
p
# Read the two lines immediately following the copyright declaration
N
N
# Insert Apache header if it is missing
/SPDX/! i\
* SPDX-License-Identifier: Apache-2.0\
*\
* Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may\
* not use this file except in compliance with the License.\
* You may obtain a copy of the License at\
*\
* http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0\
*\
* Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software\
* distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT\
* WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.\
* See the License for the specific language governing permissions and\
* limitations under the License.
# Clear copyright declaration from buffer
D
}
'
# ========================
Signed-off-by: Bence Szépkúti <bence.szepkuti@arm.com>
This is basically the same as reading from /dev/urandom on supported
systems, only it has a limit of 256 bytes per call, and does not require
an open file descriptor (so it can be used in chroots, when resource
limits are in place, or are otherwise exhausted).
It's functionally equivalent to the comparable function getentropy(),
but has been around for longer. It's actually used to implement
getentropy in FreeBSD's libc. Discussions about adding getrandom or
getentropy to NetBSD are still ongoing.
It's present in all supported versions of FreeBSD and NetBSD.
It's not present in DragonFly or OpenBSD.
Documentation: https://netbsd.gw.com/cgi-bin/man-cgi?sysctl+7
Comparable code in OpenSSL:
ddec332f32/crypto/rand/rand_unix.c (L208)
Signed-off-by: nia <nia@netbsd.org>
The function mbedtls_mpi_sub_abs first checked that A >= B and then
performed the subtraction, relying on the fact that A >= B to
guarantee that the carry propagation would stop, and not taking
advantage of the fact that the carry when subtracting two numbers can
only be 0 or 1. This made the carry propagation code a little hard to
follow.
Write an ad hoc loop for the carry propagation, checking the size of
the result. This makes termination obvious.
The initial check that A >= B is no longer needed, since the function
now checks that the carry propagation terminates, which is equivalent.
This is a slight performance gain.
Signed-off-by: Gilles Peskine <Gilles.Peskine@arm.com>
There was some confusion during review about when A->p[n] could be
nonzero. In fact, there is no need to set A->p[n]: only the
intermediate result d might need to extend to n+1 limbs, not the final
result A. So never access A->p[n]. Rework the explanation of the
calculation in a way that should be easier to follow.
Signed-off-by: Gilles Peskine <Gilles.Peskine@arm.com>
The function mpi_sub_hlp had confusing semantics: although it took a
size parameter, it accessed the limb array d beyond this size, to
propagate the carry. This made the function difficult to understand
and analyze, with a potential buffer overflow if misused (not enough
room to propagate the carry).
Change the function so that it only performs the subtraction within
the specified number of limbs, and returns the carry.
Move the carry propagation out of mpi_sub_hlp and into its caller
mbedtls_mpi_sub_abs. This makes the code of subtraction very slightly
less neat, but not significantly different.
In the one other place where mpi_sub_hlp is used, namely mpi_montmul,
this is a net win because the carry is potentially sensitive data and
the function carefully arranges to not have to propagate it.
Signed-off-by: Gilles Peskine <Gilles.Peskine@arm.com>
mpi_sub_hlp performs a subtraction A - B, but took parameters in the
order (B, A). Swap the parameters so that they match the usual
mathematical syntax.
This has the additional benefit of putting the output parameter (A)
first, which is the normal convention in this module.
Signed-off-by: Gilles Peskine <Gilles.Peskine@arm.com>
Checking the budget only after the randomization is done means sometimes we
were randomizing first, then noticing we ran out of budget, return, come back
and randomize again before we finally normalize.
While this is fine from a correctness and security perspective, it's a minor
inefficiency, and can also be disconcerting while debugging, so we might as
well avoid it.
Signed-off-by: Manuel Pégourié-Gonnard <manuel.pegourie-gonnard@arm.com>
It results in smaller code than using CTR_DRBG (64 bytes smaller on ARMv6-M
with arm-none-eabi-gcc 7.3.1), so let's use this by default when both are
available.
Signed-off-by: Manuel Pégourié-Gonnard <manuel.pegourie-gonnard@arm.com>
Unless MBEDTLS_ECP_NO_INTERNAL_RNG is defined, it's no longer possible for
f_rng to be NULL at the places that randomize coordinates.
Eliminate the NULL check in this case:
- it makes it clearer to reviewers that randomization always happens (unless
the user opted out at compile time)
- a NULL check in a place where it's easy to prove the value is never NULL
might upset or confuse static analyzers (including humans)
- removing the check saves a bit of code size
Signed-off-by: Manuel Pégourié-Gonnard <manuel.pegourie-gonnard@arm.com>
Currently we draw pseudo-random numbers at the beginning and end of the main
loop. With ECP_RESTARTABLE, it's possible that between those two occasions we
returned from the multiplication function, hence lost our internal DRBG
context that lives in this function's stack frame. This would result in the
same pseudo-random numbers being used for blinding in multiple places. While
it's not immediately clear that this would give rise to an attack, it's also
absolutely not clear that it doesn't. So let's avoid that by using a DRBG
context that lives inside the restart context and persists across
return/resume cycles. That way the RESTARTABLE case uses exactly the
same pseudo-random numbers as the non-restartable case.
Testing and compile-time options:
- The case ECP_RESTARTABLE && !ECP_NO_INTERNAL_RNG is already tested by
component_test_no_use_psa_crypto_full_cmake_asan.
- The case ECP_RESTARTABLE && ECP_NO_INTERNAL_RNG didn't have a pre-existing
test so a component is added.
Testing and runtime options: when ECP_RESTARTABLE is enabled, the test suites
already contain cases where restart happens and cases where it doesn't
(because the operation is short enough or because restart is disabled (NULL
restart context)).
Signed-off-by: Manuel Pégourié-Gonnard <manuel.pegourie-gonnard@arm.com>
While it seems cleaner and more convenient to set it in the top-level
mbedtls_ecp_mul() function, the existence of the restartable option changes
things - when it's enabled the drbg context needs to be saved in the restart
context (more precisely in the restart_mul sub-context), which can only be
done when it's allocated, which is in the curve-specific mul function.
This commit only internal drbg management from mbedtls_ecp_mul() to
ecp_mul_mxz() and ecp_mul_comb(), without modifying behaviour (even internal),
and a future commit will modify the ecp_mul_comb() version to handle restart
properly.
Signed-off-by: Manuel Pégourié-Gonnard <manuel.pegourie-gonnard@arm.com>
The case of MBEDTLS_ECP_RESTARTABLE isn't handled correctly yet: in that case
the DRBG instance should persist when resuming the operation. This will be
addressed in the next commit.
When both CTR_DRBG and HMAC_DRBG are available, CTR_DRBG is preferred since
both are suitable but CTR_DRBG tends to be faster and I needed a tie-breaker.
There are currently three possible cases to test:
- NO_INTERNAL_RNG is set -> tested in test_ecp_no_internal_rng
- it's unset and CTR_DRBG is available -> tested in the default config
- it's unset and CTR_DRBG is disabled -> tested in
test_ecp_internal_rng_no_ctr_drbg
Signed-off-by: Manuel Pégourié-Gonnard <manuel.pegourie-gonnard@arm.com>
No effect so far, except on dependency checking, as the feature it's meant to
disable isn't implemented yet (so the descriptions in config.h and the
ChangeLog entry are anticipation for now).
Signed-off-by: Manuel Pégourié-Gonnard <manuel.pegourie-gonnard@arm.com>
Let code analyzers know that this is deliberate. For example MSVC
warns about the conversion if it's implicit.
Signed-off-by: Gilles Peskine <Gilles.Peskine@arm.com>
In mpi_montmul, an auxiliary function for modular
exponentiation (mbedtls_mpi_mod_exp) that performs Montgomery
multiplication, the last step is a conditional subtraction to force
the result into the correct range. The current implementation uses a
branch and therefore may leak information about secret data to an
adversary who can observe what branch is taken through a side channel.
Avoid this potential leak by always doing the same subtraction and
doing a contant-trace conditional assignment to set the result.
Signed-off-by: Gilles Peskine <Gilles.Peskine@arm.com>
Separate out a version of mpi_safe_cond_assign that works on
equal-sized limb arrays, without worrying about allocation sizes or
signs.
Signed-off-by: Gilles Peskine <Gilles.Peskine@arm.com>
This reverts commit 2cc69fffcf.
A check was added in mpi_montmul because clang-analyzer warned about a
possibly null pointer. However this was a false positive. Recent
versions of clang-analyzer no longer emit a warning (3.6 does, 6
doesn't).
Incidentally, the size check was wrong: mpi_montmul needs
T->n >= 2 * (N->n + 1), not just T->n >= N->n + 1.
Given that this is an internal function which is only used from one
public function and in a tightly controlled way, remove both the null
check (which is of low value to begin with) and the size check (which
would be slightly more valuable, but was wrong anyway). This allows
the function not to need to return an error, which makes the source
code a little easier to read and makes the object code a little
smaller.
Signed-off-by: Gilles Peskine <Gilles.Peskine@arm.com>
The previous version attempted to write the explicit IV from
the destination buffer before it has been written there.
Signed-off-by: Hanno Becker <hanno.becker@arm.com>
Invasive testing strategy
Create a new header `common.h`.
Introduce a configuration option `MBEDTLS_TEST_HOOKS` for test-specific code, to be used in accordance with the invasive testing strategy.
This is to avoid confusion with the class of macros
MBEDTLS_SSL_PROTO_TLS1_X
which have an underscore between major and minor version number.
Signed-off-by: Hanno Becker <hanno.becker@arm.com>
TLS 1.3 record protection allows the addition of an arbitrary amount
of padding.
This commit introduces a configuration option
```
MBEDTLS_SSL_TLS13_PADDING_GRANULARITY
```
The semantics of this option is that padding is chosen in a minimal
way so that the padded plaintext has a length which is a multiple of
MBEDTLS_SSL_TLS13_PADDING_GRANULARITY.
For example, setting MBEDTLS_SSL_TLS13_PADDING_GRANULARITY to 1024
means that padded plaintexts will have length 1024, 2048, ..., while
setting it to 1 means that no padding will be used.
Signed-off-by: Hanno Becker <hanno.becker@arm.com>
This commit adds an error condition for bad user configurations
and updates the number of SSL module errors in error.h.
Signed-off-by: Ronald Cron <ronald.cron@arm.com>
This commit uses the previously defined macro to uniformize
bounds checks in several places. It also adds bounds checks to
the ClientHello writing function that were previously missing.
Also, the functions adding extensions to the ClientHello message
can now fail if the buffer is too small or a different error
condition occurs, and moreover they take an additional buffer
end parameter to free them from the assumption that one is
writing to the default output buffer.
Signed-off-by: Ronald Cron <ronald.cron@arm.com>
new name: mbedtls_x509_crt_parse_der_with_ext_cb
Co-authored-by: Gilles Peskine <gilles.peskine@arm.com>
Signed-off-by: Nicola Di Lieto <nicola.dilieto@gmail.com>
The structure `mbedtls_ssl_transform` representing record protection
transformations should ideally be used through a function-based
interface only, as this will ease change of implementation as well
as the addition of new record protection routines in the future.
This commit makes a step in that direction by introducing the
helper function `ssl_transform_get_explicit_iv_len()` which
returns the size of the pre-expansion during record encryption
due to the potential addition of an explicit IV.
Signed-off-by: Hanno Becker <hanno.becker@arm.com>
This commit simplifies nonce derivation for AEAD based record protection
routines in the following way.
So far, code distinguished between the cases of GCM+CCM and ChachaPoly:
- In the case of GCM+CCM, the AEAD nonce is the concatentation
of a 4-byte Fixed IV and a dynamically chosen 8-byte IV which is prepended
to the record. In Mbed TLS, this is always chosen to be the record sequence
number, but it need not to.
- In the case of ChaChaPoly, the AEAD nonce is derived as
`( 12-byte Fixed IV ) XOR ( 0 || 8-byte dynamic IV == record seq nr )`
and the dynamically chosen IV is no longer prepended to the record.
This commit removes this distinction by always computing the record nonce
via the formula
`IV == ( Fixed IV || 0 ) XOR ( 0 || Dynamic IV )`
The ChaChaPoly case is recovered in case `Len(Fixed IV) == Len(IV)`, and
GCM+CCM is recovered when `Len(IV) == Len(Fixed IV) + Len(Dynamic IV)`.
Moreover, a getter stub `ssl_transform_aead_dynamic_iv_is_explicit()`
is introduced which infers from a transform whether the dynamically
chosen part of the IV is explicit, which in the current implementation
of `mbedtls_ssl_transform` can be derived from the helper field
`mbedtls_ssl_transform::fixed_ivlen`.
Signed-off-by: Hanno Becker <hanno.becker@arm.com>
The computation of the per-record nonce for AEAD record protection
varies with the AEAD algorithm and the TLS version in use.
This commit introduces a helper function for the nonce computation
to ease readability of the quite monolithic record encrytion routine.
Signed-off-by: Hanno Becker <hanno.becker@arm.com>
The previous record protection code added the explicit part of the
record nonce prior to encrypting the record. This temporarily leaves
the record structure in the undesireable state that the data outsie
of the interval `rec->data_offset, .., rec->data_offset + rec->data_len`
has already been written.
This commit moves the addition of the explicit IV past record encryption.
Signed-off-by: Hanno Becker <hanno.becker@arm.com>
The internal functions
`ssl_cid_{build/parse}_inner_plaintext()`
implement the TLSInnerPlaintext mechanism used by DTLS 1.2 + CID
in order to allow for flexible length padding and to protect the
true content type of a record.
This feature is also present in TLS 1.3 support for which is under
development. As a preparatory step towards sharing the code between
the case of DTLS 1.2 + CID and TLS 1.3, this commit renames
`ssl_cid_{build/parse}_inner_plaintext()`
to
`ssl_{build/parse}_inner_plaintext()`.
Signed-off-by: Hanno Becker <hanno.becker@arm.com>
Now that lifetimes have structures and secure element drivers handle
all the lifetimes with a certain location, update driver registration
to take a location as argument rather than a lifetime.
This commit updates the Mbed TLS implementation.
Signed-off-by: Gilles Peskine <Gilles.Peskine@arm.com>
The ssl_cli.c:ssl_write_supported_elliptic_curves_ext()
function is compiled only if MBEDTLS_ECDH_C, MBEDTLS_ECDSA_C
or MBEDTLS_KEY_EXCHANGE_ECJPAKE_ENABLED is defined which
implies that MBEDTLS_ECP_C is defined. Thus remove the
precompiler conditions on MBEDTLS_ECP_C in its code.
Signed-off-by: Ronald Cron <ronald.cron@arm.com>
On dual world platforms, we want to run the PK module (pk.c) on the NS
side so TLS can use PSA APIs via the PK interface. PK currently has a
hard dependency on mbedtls_ecc_group_to_psa() which is declared in
crypto_extra.h, but only defined in psa_crypto.c, which is only built
for the S side.
Without this change, dual world platforms get error messages like the
following.
[Error] @0,0: L6218E: Undefined symbol mbedtls_ecc_group_to_psa (referred from BUILD/LPC55S69_NS/ARM/mbed-os/features/mbedtls/mbed-crypto/src/pk.o)
Make mbedtls_ecc_group_to_psa() inline within crypto_extra.h so that it
is available to both NS and S world code.
Fixes#3300
Signed-off-by: Darryl Green <darryl.green@arm.com>
Signed-off-by: Jaeden Amero <jaeden.amero@arm.com>
Clear bits in mbedtls_ecc_group_to_psa() to avoid static analyzers and
possibly compilers from warning that bits may be used uninitialized in
certain code paths.
For example, if mbedtls_ecc_group_to_psa() were to be inlined in
crypto_extra.h, the following compiler warning is likely.
In file included from ../include/psa/crypto.h:3774:0,
from ../include/mbedtls/pk.h:49,
from pk.c:29:
pk.c: In function 'mbedtls_pk_wrap_as_opaque':
../include/psa/crypto_struct.h:460:33: error: 'bits' may be used uninitialized in this function [-Werror=maybe-uninitialized]
attributes->core.bits = (psa_key_bits_t) bits;
^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
pk.c:608:12: note: 'bits' was declared here
size_t bits;
^~~~
Signed-off-by: Jaeden Amero <jaeden.amero@arm.com>
This routine is functionally equivalent to mbedtls_x509_crt_parse_der(),
but it accepts an additional callback function which it calls with
every unsupported certificate extension.
Proposed solution to https://github.com/ARMmbed/mbedtls/issues/3241
Signed-off-by: Nicola Di Lieto <nicola.dilieto@gmail.com>
getaddrinfo() is not available on win2k. By including wspiapi.h (if
_WIN32_WINNT is defined as value < 0x0501) then a compatibility layer
will be used when running on win2k. For more details, refer to Microsoft
docs for getaddrinfo().
Signed-off-by: opatomic <j@opatomic.com>
ecp_double_add_mxz wrongly does an MPI addition followed by a call to
MOD_MUL instead of MOD_ADD. This is more visible since the
mbedtls_mpi_xxx_mod functions have been added in commit 3b3b34f608
("Replace some macros by functions").
Fix that by using mbedtls_mpi_add_mod instead. The testsuite still
passes after that change.
Signed-off-by: Aurelien Jarno <aurelien@aurel32.net>
It is sufficient to check for the strongest limit only. Using a smaller
type ensures there is no overflow (assuming size_t is at least 32 bits).
Fixes#2916
Signed-off-by: irwir <irwir@users.noreply.github.com>
1. The functions mbedtls_high_level_strerr and mbedtls_low_level_strerr
accept any error code and extract the high-level and low-level parts
respectively.
2. Documentation updates.
Signed-off-by: Gaurav Aggarwal <aggarg@amazon.com>
GCC and Clang accept
```
typedef struct foo foo_t;
typedef struct foo { ... } foo_t;
```
But this is not valid ISO C due to the redefinition of `foo_t`.
Signed-off-by: Gilles Peskine <Gilles.Peskine@arm.com>
A file generated based on the output of `make list` from programs has been
re-generated.
Signed-off-by: Manuel Pégourié-Gonnard <manuel.pegourie-gonnard@arm.com>
When parsing a certificate with the basic constraints extension
the max_pathlen that was read from it was incremented regardless
of its value. However, if the max_pathlen is equal to INT_MAX (which
is highly unlikely), an undefined behaviour would occur.
This commit adds a check to ensure that such value is not accepted
as valid. Relevant tests for INT_MAX and INT_MAX-1 are also introduced.
Certificates added in this commit were generated using the
test_suite_x509write, function test_x509_crt_check. Input data taken
from the "Certificate write check Server1 SHA1" test case, so the generated
files are like the "server1.crt", but with the "is_ca" field set to 1 and
max_pathlen as described by the file name.
Signed-off-by: Andrzej Kurek <andrzej.kurek@arm.com>
The presence of these markers in the original code was helpful to me in
figuring out that this portion of the code is auto-generated.
Therefore, I think those are useful and should be present.
Signed-off-by: Gaurav Aggarwal <aggarg@amazon.com>
- Use switch case instead of loop to generate faster code
- Add #if defined to address compiler error
Signed-off-by: Gaurav Aggarwal <aggarg@amazon.com>
Problem
-------
mbedtls_strerror is a utility function which converts an mbedTLS error code
into a human readable string. It requires the caller to allocate a buffer every
time an error code needs to be converted to a string. It is an overkill and a
waste of RAM for resource constrained microcontrollers - where the most common
use case is to use these strings for logging.
Solution
--------
The proposed commit adds two functions:
* const char * mbedtls_high_level_strerr( int error_code );
* const char * mbedtls_low_level_strerr( int error_code );
The above two functions convert the high level and low level parts of an mbedTLS
error code to human readable strings. They return a const pointer to an
unmodifiable string which is not supposed to be modified by the caller and only
to be used for logging purposes. The caller no longer needs to allocate a
buffer.
Backward Compatibility
----------------------
The proposed change is completely backward compatible as it does not change
the existing mbedtls_strerror function and ensures that it continues to behave
the same way.
Signed-off-by: Gaurav Aggarwal <aggarg@amazon.com>
This commit introduces two changes:
- Add in_msg and out_msg calculations for buffer upsizing. This was previously
considered as unnecessary, but renegotiation using certain ciphersuites needs
this.
- Improving the way out_msg and in_msg pointers are calculated, so that even
if no resizing is introduced, the pointers remain the same;
New tests added:
- various renegotiation schemes with a range of MFL's and ciphersuites;
- an ssl-opt.sh test exercising two things that were problematic: renegotiation
with TLS-ECDHE-ECDSA-WITH-AES-128-CCM-8 and a server MFL that's smaller
than the one negotiated by the client.
Signed-off-by: Andrzej Kurek <andrzej.kurek@arm.com>
Since the server might want to have a different maximum fragment length
for the outgoing messages than the negotiated one - introduce a new way of
computing it. This commit also adds additional ssl-opt.sh tests ensuring
that the maximum fragment lengths are set as expected.
mbedtls_ssl_get_max_frag_len() is now a deprecated function,
being an alias to mbedtls_ssl_get_output_max_frag_len(). The behaviour
of this function is the same as before.
Signed-off-by: Andrzej Kurek <andrzej.kurek@arm.com>
t is never used uninitialized, since the first loop iteration reads 0
bytes of it and then writes hash_len bytes, and subsequent iterations
read and write hash_len bytes. However this is somewhat fragile, and
it would be legitimate for a static analyzer to be unsure.
Initialize t explicitly, to make the code clearer and more robust, at
negligible cost.
Reported by Vasily Evseenko in
https://github.com/ARMmbed/mbedtls/pull/2942
with a slightly different fix.
Signed-off-by: Gilles Peskine <Gilles.Peskine@arm.com>
The current logging was sub-standard, in particular there was no trace
whatsoever of the HelloVerifyRequest being sent. Now it's being logged with
the usual levels: 4 for full content, 2 return of f_send, 1 decision about
sending it (or taking other branches in the same function) because that's the
same level as state changes in the handshake, and also same as the "possible
client reconnect" message" to which it's the logical continuation (what are we
doing about it?).
Signed-off-by: Manuel Pégourié-Gonnard <manuel.pegourie-gonnard@arm.com>
In x509.c, the self-test code is dependent on MBEDTLS_CERTS_C and
MBEDTLS_SHA256_C being enabled. At some point in the recent past that dependency
was on MBEDTLS_SHA1_C but changed to SHA256, but the comment wasn't updated.
This commit updates the comment.
Signed-off-by: Simon Butcher <simon.butcher@arm.com>
Section 4.2.8 of RFC 6347 describes how to handle the case of a DTLS client
establishing a new connection using the same UDP quartet as an already active
connection, which we implement under the compile option
MBEDTLS_SSL_DLTS_CLIENT_PORT_REUSE. Relevant excerpts:
[the server] MUST NOT destroy the existing
association until the client has demonstrated reachability either by
completing a cookie exchange or by completing a complete handshake
including delivering a verifiable Finished message.
[...]
The reachability requirement prevents
off-path/blind attackers from destroying associations merely by
sending forged ClientHellos.
Our code chooses to use a cookie exchange for establishing reachability, but
unfortunately that check was effectively removed in a recent refactoring,
which changed what value ssl_handle_possible_reconnect() needs to return in
order for ssl_get_next_record() (introduced in that refactoring) to take the
proper action. Unfortunately, in addition to changing the value, the
refactoring also changed a return statement to an assignment to the ret
variable, causing the function to reach the code for a valid cookie, which
immediately destroys the existing association, effectively bypassing the
cookie verification.
This commit fixes that by immediately returning after sending a
HelloVerifyRequest when a ClientHello without a valid cookie is found. It also
updates the description of the function to reflect the new return value
convention (the refactoring updated the code but not the documentation).
The commit that changed the return value convention (and introduced the bug)
is 2fddd3765e, whose commit message explains the
change.
Note: this bug also indirectly caused the ssl-opt.sh test case "DTLS client
reconnect from same port: reconnect" to occasionally fail due to a race
condition between the reception of the ClientHello carrying a valid cookie and
the closure of the connection by the server after noticing the ClientHello
didn't carry a valid cookie after it incorrectly destroyed the previous
connection, that could cause that ClientHello to be invisible to the server
(if that message reaches the server just before it does `net_close()`). A
welcome side effect of this commit is to remove that race condition, as the
new connection will immediately start with a ClientHello carrying a valid
cookie in the SSL input buffer, so the server will not call `net_close()` and
not risk discarding a better ClientHello that arrived in the meantime.
Signed-off-by: Manuel Pégourié-Gonnard <manuel.pegourie-gonnard@arm.com>
See the comments in the code for how an attack would go, and the ChangeLog
entry for an impact assessment. (For ECDSA, leaking a few bits of the scalar
over several signatures translates to full private key recovery using a
lattice attack.)
Signed-off-by: Manuel Pégourié-Gonnard <manuel.pegourie-gonnard@arm.com>
This change was first introduced in 8af3923 - see this commit for more background.
After the removal of crypto directory, there are no targets that require a
crypto library with the directory prefix, so there's also no need for the priority
dependency to be declared. This commit removes it.
Signed-off-by: Andrzej Kurek <andrzej.kurek@arm.com>
Define MBEDTLS_STATIC_TESTABLE to mark code that is only exported for
test purposes. Since this is for internal library
use only, define it in a header in library/. Since there is no
suitable header, create one.
Signed-off-by: Gilles Peskine <Gilles.Peskine@arm.com>
When this option is enabled, the product includes additional
interfaces that enable additional tests. This option should not be
enabled in production, but is included in the "full" build to enable
the extra tests.
Signed-off-by: Gilles Peskine <Gilles.Peskine@arm.com>
Merge the latest state of the target branch (mbedtls/development) into the
pull request to merge mbed-crypto into mbedtls.
Conflicts:
* ChangeLog: add/add conflict. Resolve by using the usual section order.
Rename identifiers containing double-underscore (`__`) to avoid `__`.
The reason to avoid double-underscore is that all identifiers
containing double-underscore are reserved in C++. Rename all such
identifiers that appear in any public header, including ssl_internal.h
which is in principle private but in practice is installed with the
public headers.
This commit makes check-names.sh pass.
```
perl -i -pe 's/\bMBEDTLS_SSL__ECP_RESTARTABLE\b/MBEDTLS_SSL_ECP_RESTARTABLE_ENABLED/g; s/\bMBEDTLS_KEY_EXCHANGE_(_\w+)_(_\w+)\b/MBEDTLS_KEY_EXCHANGE${1}${2}/g' include/mbedtls/*.h library/*.c programs/*/*.c scripts/data_files/rename-1.3-2.0.txt tests/suites/*.function
```
Remove code guarded by `USE_CRYPTO_SUBMODULE`. It's dead now that
crypto can no longer be a submodule.
In `library/Makefile`:
* Replace `$(CRYPTO_INCLUDE)` with the single include directory
`-I../include`.
* Remove references to `$(OBJS_CRYPTO)` when it's in addition to the
local objects (`*.o`) since `$(OBJS_CRYPTO)` is now a subset of the
local objects.
* Merge modules that were duplicated between the mbedtls and the
mbed-crypto repositories back into the single list for `OBJS_CRYPTO`.
Merge `unremove-non-crypto` into `mbedtls/development`. The branch
`unremove-non-crypto` was obtained by starting from `mbed-crypto/development`,
then reverting many commits that removed X.509 and TLS functionality when Mbed
Crypto forked from Mbed TLS (the “unremoval”), then make a few tweaks to
facilitate the merge.
The unremoval step restored old versions of some tls files. If a file doesn't
exist in mbed-crypto, check out the mbedtls version, regardless of what
happened during the unremoval of tls files in the crypto tree. Also
unconditionally take the mbedtls version of a few files where the
modifications are completely project-specific and are not relevant in
mbed-crypto:
* `.github/issue_template.md`: completely different. We may want to reconcile
them independently as a follow-up.
* `.travis.yml`: would only be reverted to an earlier tls version.
* `README.md`: completely different. We may want to reconcile them
independently as a follow-up.
* `doxygen/input/doc_mainpage.h`: the changes in crypto were minimal and not
relevant except as a stopgap as mbed-crypto did not have its own product
versioning in the Doxygen documentation.
* `tests/.jenkins/Jenkinsfile`: completely different.
* `tests/data_files/Makefile`: there were no changes in mbed-crypto,
but the unremoval step restored an old version.
Shell script for everything to do after the merge apart from the conflict
resolution:
```
tls_files=($(comm -23 <(git ls-tree -r --name-only HEAD) <(git ls-tree -r --name-only $(git merge-base upstream-crypto/development MERGE_HEAD))))
tls_files+=($tls_files .github/issue_template.md .travis.yml README.md doxygen/input/doc_mainpage.h tests/.jenkins/Jenkinsfile tests/data_files/Makefile)
git checkout --theirs HEAD -- $tls_files
git add -- $tls_files
```
Resolve the remaining conflicts:
* `library/CMakeLists.txt`:
* Keep the TLS definition of `src_crypto`
* `USE_SHARED_MBEDTLS_LIBRARY`: keep all three libraries, with both
`include` and `crypto/include` in `target_include_directories`, all with
version `2.21.0`.
* `programs/Makefile`:
* Reconcile the APPS lists (add/add from a differently-formatted common
ancestor): insert the `psa/*` from crypto into the tls list.
* Keep the `fuzz` target defined only in tls version.
* Keep the recipe (only in tls version) cleaning `ssl_pthread_server`
stuff for the `clean` target.
* `scripts/config.py`:
* `include_in_full`: add/add conflict. Keep both.
* `tests/scripts/all.sh`:
* `component_test_no_use_psa_crypto_full_cmake_asan`: partially old
version in crypto. Take the tls version.
* `component_test_malloc_0_null` and more: take
`component_test_malloc_0_null` from crypto (with `config.py` rather than
`config.pl`, and with `$ASAN_FLAGS` rather than an explicit list), but
add the call to `ssl-opt.sh` from tls. Take the other components from
crypto.
With this commit, building and running the unit tests with both `make ` and
`cmake` work in the default configuration on Linux. Other platforms, build
systems and configurations are likely not to work, and there is some
regression in test coverage.
There is some loss of functionality because the unremoval step restored older
versions of tls content. This commit contains the latest tls version of
tls-only files, but some changes from the tls side in files that existed on
both sides have regressed. Most problematic changes are hunks that remove some
tls-specific feature and contain either a C preprocessor symbol identifying a
tls-specific module or option, or the name of a tls-specific file. Hunks
that remove a tls-specific preprocessor symbol can be identified with the
regular expression `^-.*MBEDTLS_(ERR_)?(PKCS11|X509|NET|SSL)_`.
Subsequent commits will revert a few parts of the patch from this merge commit
in order to restore the tls functionality that it removes, ensure that the
test coverage includes what was covered in either branch, and fix test
failures.
This reverts commit d832f187f7.
Conflicts:
* CMakeLists.txt:
* USE_PKCS11_HELPER_LIBRARY: there has been a change immediately before
where it was removed. Just re-add what was removed.
* tests/CMakeLists.txt:
* USE_PKCS11_HELPER_LIBRARY: there has been a change immediately before
where it was removed. Just re-add what was removed.
This reverts commit d874a1fd14.
Conflicts:
* CMakeLists.txt:
* ENABLE_ZLIB_SUPPORT: there has been a change immediately after
where it was removed. Just re-add what was removed.
* tests/CMakeLists.txt:
* ENABLE_ZLIB_SUPPORT: there has been a change immediately after
where it was removed. Just re-add what was removed.
This reverts commit 8298d70bee.
Conflicts:
* library/Makefile: removal of SOEXT_X509 and SOEXT_TLS vs change of
value of SOEXT_CRYPTO. Keep all, with the new value of SOEXT_CRYPTO.
This reverts commit 1c66e48670.
Conflicts:
* include/mbedtls/check_config.h:
* MBEDTLS_SSL_PROTO_SSL3: there has been an addition (of
MBEDTLS_SHA512_NO_SHA384) at the place where it was removed. Re-add it
after (alphabetical order).
* MBEDTLS_ENABLE_WEAK_CIPHERSUITES: there has been an addition (of
MBEDTLS_CTR_DRBG_USE_128_BIT_KEY) at the place where it was removed.
Re-add it after (alphabetical order).
* MBEDTLS_SSL_ALL_ALERT_MESSAGES: there has been an addition (of
MBEDTLS_SHA512_SMALLER) at the place where it was removed. Re-add it
after (alphabetical order).
* include/mbedtls/config.h:
* MBEDTLS_ENABLE_WEAK_CIPHERSUITES: there has been an addition (of
MBEDTLS_CTR_DRBG_USE_128_BIT_KEY) at the place where it was removed.
Re-add it after (alphabetical order).
* MBEDTLS_SSL_ALL_ALERT_MESSAGES: there has been an addition (of
MBEDTLS_SHA512_SMALLER) at the place where it was removed. Re-add it
after (alphabetical order).
* library/version_features.c: re-generate by running
scripts/generate_features.pl.
* programs/test/query_config.c: re-generate by running
scripts/generate_query_config.pl.
* scripts/config.pl: this file has been replaced by config.py. Port
the reversed changes to config.py:
* Revert removing three symbols from the list of symbols to
exclude from full.
* Revert removing one symbol (MBEDTLS_NET_C) from the list of symbols
to exclude from baremetal.
* scripts/footprint.sh:
* Re-add the line to unset MBEDTLS_NET_C, but with config.py instead of
config.pl.
* tests/scripts/all.sh:
* component_test_no_platform: re-add the line to unset MBEDTLS_NET_C, but
with config.py instead of config.pl.
* component_build_arm_none_eabi_gcc,
component_build_arm_none_eabi_gcc_no_udbl_division,
component_build_arm_none_eabi_gcc_no_64bit_multiplication,
component_build_armcc: these components now use the baremetal
configuration, so they do not need to turn off MBEDTLS_NET_C explicitly.
This reverts commit bb1f701212.
* include/mbedtls/check_config.h:
* MBEDTLS_X509_RSASSA_PSS_SUPPORT: there has been an addition (of
MBEDTLS_SHA512_NO_SHA384) at the place where it was removed.
Re-add it before MBEDTLS_SHA512_NO_SHA384 to keep it grouped
with MBEDTLS_RSA_C.
Conflicts:
* scripts/config.pl: this file has been replaced by config.py. Port
the reversed changes to config.py:
* Revert removing three symbols from the list of symbols to
exclude from full.
Although the 'flags' variable is not checked or used after a call to
mbedtls_ssl_check_cert_usage, it might be in the future. With this fix, after
each iteration, the flags will apply only to the most recent certificate, not
to any of the previous ones checked. This fix also stops any reads and
writes via a '|=' from/to an uninitialized variable happening.
This commit fixes#2444.
Signed-off-by: Andrzej Kurek <andrzej.kurek@arm.com>
Add a conditional buffer resizing feature. Introduce tests exercising
it in various setups (serialization, renegotiation, mfl manipulations).
Signed-off-by: Andrzej Kurek <andrzej.kurek@arm.com>
Some code paths want to access members of the mbedtls_rsa_context structure.
We can only do that when using our own implementation, as otherwise we don't
know anything about that structure.
When parsing a PKCS#1 RSAPrivateKey structure, all parameters are always
present. After importing them, we need to call rsa_complete() for the sake of
alternative implementations. That function interprets zero as a signal for
"this parameter was not provided". As that's never the case, we mustn't pass
any zero value to that function, so we need to explicitly check for it.
This commit is the final step in separating the functionality of
what was originally ssl_tls.c into both ssl_tls.c and ssl_msg.c.
So far, ssl_msg.c has been created as an identical copy of ssl_tls.c.
For each block of code in these files, this commit removes it from
precisely one of the two files, depending on where the respective
functionality belongs.
The splitting separates the following functionalities:
1) An implementation of the TLS and DTLS messaging layer, that is,
the record layer as well as the DTLS retransmission state machine.
This is now contained in ssl_msg.c
2) Handshake parsing and writing functions shared between client and
server (functions specific to either client or server are implemented
in ssl_cli.c and ssl_srv.c, respectively).
This is remains in ssl_tls.c.
This commit adds the newly created copy ssl_msg.c of ssl_tls.c
to the build system but guards its content by an `#if 0 ... #endif`
preprocessor guard in order to avoid compilation failures resulting
from code duplication. This guard will be removed once the contents
of ssl_tls.c and ssl_msg.c have been made disjoint.
This commit is the first in a series of commits aiming to split
the content of ssl_tls.c in two files ssl_tls.c and ssl_msg.c.
As a first step, this commit replaces ssl_tls.c by two identical
copies ssl_tls_old.c and ssl_msg.c. Even though the file
ssl_tls_old.c will subsequently be renamed back into ssl_tls.c,
this approach retains the git history in both files.
This reverts commit c0c92fea3d, reversing
changes made to bfc73bcfd2.
stat() will never return S_IFLNK as the file type, as stat() explicitly
follows symlinks.
Fixes#3005.
Files deleted by us: keep them deleted.
```
git rm $(git status -s | sed -n 's/^DU //p')
```
Individual files with conflicts:
* `README.md`: keep the crypto version.
* `doxygen/input/doc_mainpage.h`: keep the crypto version (with an obsolete Mbed Crypto version number).
* `include/mbedtls/error.h`:
* `ERROR`: similar additions made through parallel commits, with only whitespace differences. Align with the tls version.
* `library/CMakeLists.txt`: keep the crypto version.
* `library/Makefile`: keep the crypto version.
* `scripts/generate_errors.pl`: keep the crypto version (the relevant changes were made through parallel commits).
* `tests/scripts/check-test-cases.py`:
* `Results`: keep the crypto version, which has both the new argument to the constructor (added in crypto only) and the class docstring (added through parallel commits).
* `tests/suites/helpers.function`:
* `ARRAY_LENGTH`, `ASSERT_ALLOC`: additions in the same location. Keep both, in indifferent order.
* `tests/suites/target_test.function`:
* `receive_uint32`: keep the crypto version which has an additional bug fix. The tls changes made in tls are irrelevant after this bug fix.
* `visualc/VS2010/mbedTLS.vcxproj`: run `scripts/generate_visualc_files.pl`.
Review of non-conflicting changes:
* `all.sh`: 1 change.
* zlib test components: don't add them.
* `include/CMakeLists.txt`: 1 change.
* `target_include_directories`: doesn't work as is (different target name). Don't take the change.
* All other non-conflicting changes: take them.
Adapt to the change of encoding of elliptic curve key types in PSA
crypto. Before, an EC key type encoded the TLS curve identifier. Now
the EC key type only includes an ad hoc curve family identifier, and
determining the exact curve requires both the key type and size. This
commit moves from the old encoding and old definitions from
crypto/include/mbedtls/psa_util.h to the new encoding and definitions
from the immediately preceding crypto submodule update.
If psa_key_agreement_ecdh fails, there may be output that leaks
sensitive information in the output buffer. Zeroize it.
If this is due to an underlying failure in the ECDH implementation, it
is currently not an issue since both the traditional Mbed TLS/Crypto
implementation and Everest only write to the output buffer once every
intermediate step has succeeded, but zeroizing is more robust. If this
is because the recently added key size check fails, a leak could be a
serious issue.
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.