* restricted/pr/528:
Update query_config.c
Fix failure in SSLv3 per-version suites test
Adjust DES exclude lists in test scripts
Clarify 3DES changes in ChangeLog
Fix documentation for 3DES removal
Exclude 3DES tests in test scripts
Fix wording of ChangeLog and 3DES_REMOVE docs
Reduce priority of 3DES ciphersuites
* public/pr/2028:
Update the crypto submodule to a78c958
Fix ChangeLog entry to correct release version
Fix typo in x509write test data
Add ChangeLog entry for unused bits in bitstrings
Improve docs for named bitstrings and their usage
Add tests for (named) bitstring to suite_asn1write
Add new function mbedtls_asn1_write_named_bitstring()
The test used 3DES as the suite for SSLv3, which now makes the handshake fails
with "no ciphersuite in common", failing the test as well. Use Camellia
instead (as there are not enough AES ciphersuites before TLS 1.2 to
distinguish between the 3 versions).
Document some dependencies, but not all. Just trying to avoid introducing new
issues by using a new cipher here, not trying to make it perfect, which is a
much larger task out of scope of this commit.
Additional work done as part of merge:
- Run ./tests/scripts/check-generated-files.sh and check in the
resulting changes to programs/ssl/query_config.c
Line issue trackers are conceptually a subclass of file issue
trackers: they're file issue trackers where issues arise from checking
each line independently. So make it an actual subclass.
Pylint pointed out the design smell: there was an abstract method that
wasn't always overridden in concrete child classes.
Make check-python-files.sh run pylint on all *.py files (in
directories where they are known to be present), rather than list
files explicitly.
Fix a bug whereby the return status of check-python-files.sh was only
based on the last file passing, i.e. errors in other files were
effectively ignored.
Make check-python-files.sh run pylint unconditionally. Since pylint3
is not critical, make all.sh to skip running check-python-files.sh if
pylint3 is not available.
The pylint configuration in .pylint was a modified version of the
output of `pylint --generate-rcfile` from an unknown version of
pylint. Replace it with a file that only contains settings that are
modified from the default, with an explanation of why each setting is
modified.
The new .pylintrc was written from scratch, based on the output of
pylint on the current version of the files and on a judgement of what
to silence generically, what to silence on a case-by-case basis and
what to fix.
The ecp_get_type function comes handy in higher level modules and tests
as well. It is not inline anymore, to enable alternative implementations
to implement it for themselves.
mbedtls_ecp_read_key() module returned without an error even when
importing keys corresponding to the requested group was not
implemented.
We change this and return an error when the requested group is not
supported and make the remaining import/export functions more robust.
Commit "Smoke-test operation contexts after setup+abort" replaced
{failed-setup; abort} sequences by {failed-setup; successful-setup}.
We want to test that, but we also want to test {failed-setup; abort}.
So test {failed-setup; abort; failed-setup; successful-setup}.
After a successful setup followed by abort, or after a failed setup
from an inactive state, a context must be usable. Test this for
hash, MAC and cipher contexts.
Renamed the tests because they are explicitly testing Curve25519 and
nothing else. Improved test coverage, test documentation and extended
in-code documentation with a specific reference to the standard as well.
The library is able to perform computations and cryptographic schemes on
curves with x coordinate ladder representation. Here we add the
capability to export such points.
The function `mbedtls_mpi_write_binary()` writes big endian byte order,
but we need to be able to write little endian in some caseses. (For
example when handling keys corresponding to Montgomery curves.)
Used `echo xx | tac -rs ..` to transform the test data to little endian.
The private keys used in ECDH differ in the case of Weierstrass and
Montgomery curves. They have different constraints, the former is based
on big endian, the latter little endian byte order. The fundamental
approach is different too:
- Weierstrass keys have to be in the right interval, otherwise they are
rejected.
- Any byte array of the right size is a valid Montgomery key and it
needs to be masked before interpreting it as a number.
Historically it was sufficient to use mbedtls_mpi_read_binary() to read
private keys, but as a preparation to improve support for Montgomery
curves we add mbedtls_ecp_read_key() to enable uniform treatment of EC
keys.
For the masking the `mbedtls_mpi_set_bit()` function is used. This is
suboptimal but seems to provide the best trade-off at this time.
Alternatives considered:
- Making a copy of the input buffer (less efficient)
- removing the `const` constraint from the input buffer (breaks the api
and makes it less user friendly)
- applying the mask directly to the limbs (violates the api between the
modules and creates and unwanted dependency)
The library is able to perform computations and cryptographic schemes on
curves with x coordinate ladder representation. Here we add the
capability to import such points.
The function `mbedtls_mpi_read_binary()` expects big endian byte order,
but we need to be able to read from little endian in some caseses. (For
example when handling keys corresponding to Montgomery curves.)
Used `echo xx | tac -rs .. | tr [a-z] [A-Z]` to transform the test data
to little endian and `echo "ibase=16;xx" | bc` to convert to decimal.
Additional work done as part of merge:
- Run ./tests/scripts/check-generated-files.sh and check in the
resulting changes to programs/ssl/query_config.c
Add a test case for doing an ECDH calculation by calling
mbedtls_ecdh_get_params on both keys, with keys belonging to
different groups. This should fail, but currently passes.
Calling psa_*_setup() twice on a MAC, cipher, or hash context should
result in a PSA_ERROR_BAD_STATE error because the operation has already
been set up.
Fixes#10
Extend hash bad order test in line with the new bad order tests for MAC
and cipher, covering more cases and making comments and test layout
consistent.
Ensure that when doing hash operations out of order, PSA_ERROR_BAD_STATE
is returned as documented in crypto.h and the PSA Crypto specification.
In multipart cipher tests, test that each step of psa_cipher_update
produces output of the expected length. The length is hard-coded in
the test data since it depends on the mode.
The length of the output of psa_cipher_finish is effectively tested
because it's the total output length minus the length produced by the
update steps.
Test data obtained with Python+PyCrypto:
AES.new(key, mode=AES.MODE_CTR, counter=Crypto.Util.Counter.new(128, initial_value=0x2a2a2a2a2a2a2a2a2a2a2a2a2a2a2a2a)).encrypt(plaintext.decode('hex')).encode('hex')
The output length can be equal to the input length.
This wasn't noticed at runtime because we happened to only test with
CBC with the first chunk being a partial block.
Some calls to psa_cipher_finish or psa_cipher_update append to a
buffer. Several of these calls were not calculating the offset into
the buffer or the remaining buffer size correctly.
This did not lead to buffer overflows before because the buffer sizes
were sufficiently large for our test inputs. This did not lead to
incorrect output when the test was designed to append but actually
wrote too early because all the existing test cases either have no
output from finish (stream cipher) or have no output from update (CBC,
with less than one block of input).
The test function pkcs1_rsaes_v15_encrypt gets its fake-random input
for padding from a test parameter. In one test case, the parameter was
too short, causing a fallback to rand(). The reference output depends
on this random input, so the test data was correct only for a platform
with one particular rand() implementation. Supply sufficient
fake-random input so that rand() isn't called.
Check generator validity (i.e. that alg has been initialized) before
allowing reads from the generator or allowing reads of the generator's
capacity.
This aligns our implementation with the documented error code behavior
in our crypto.h and the PSA Crypto API.
PSA spec now defines more generic PSA storage types instead of the ITS
specific ones. This is necessary in order to integrate with
the newer implementation of PSA ITS landing in Mbed OS soon.
Changes include the following:
- psa_status_t replaces psa_its_status_t
- psa_storage_info_t replaces psa_its_info_t
- psa_storage_uid_t replaces psa_its_uid_t
Resolve conflicts by performing the following.
- Take the upstream Mbed TLS ChangeLog verbatim.
- Reject changes to Makefiles and CMake that are related to using Mbed
Crypto as a submodule. It doesn't make sense to use Mbed Crypto as a
submodule of itself.
- Reject README changes, as Mbed Crypto has its own, different README.
- Reject PSA-related changes to config.h. We don't want to disable the
availability of the PSA Crypto API by default in the Mbed Crypto
config.h.
- Don't inadvertently revert dead code removal in
mbedtls_cipher_write_tag() which was added in f2a7529403 ("Fix
double return statement in cipher.c")
- Where Mbed Crypto already had some MBEDTLS_USE_PSA_CRYPTO code (from
past companion PRs) take the latest version from Mbed TLS which
includes integration with MBEDTLS_CHECK_PARAMS.
- Update the version of the shared library files to match what's
currently present in Mbed TLS.
- Reject removal of testing with PSA from config full tests.
- Resolve conflicts in test tests/suites/helpers.function, where both
Mbed Crypto and Mbed TLS both added documentation for TEST_ASSERT.
Combine text from both documentation efforts.
- Reject adding a submodule of ourselves.
- Reject addition of submodule tests in all.sh.
- Reject addition of submodule to library path in
tests/scripts/run-test-suites.pl.
- Avoid using USE_CRYPTO_SUBMODULE=1 in
component_test_use_psa_crypto_full_cmake_asan() in all.sh.
When using PSA with MBEDTLS_ENTROPY_NV_SEED, some test suites
require the seed file for PSA initialization, which was normally generated
later, when entropy tests were run. This change creates an initial seedfile
in all.sh.
Some of the types may in principle be wider than `unsigned`, so use
`unsigned long` in printf.
Add support for signed types: a status is a signed value, and
preferentially printed in decimal.
Don't unconditionally enable PSA Crypto for all tests. Only enable it in
tests that require it. This allows crypto tests to check that
psa_crypto_init() fails when it is supposed to fail, since we want to
perform some action in a test, and then call psa_crypto_init() and check
the result without it having been called previously.
Set the CMake-observed variable `CTEST_OUTPUT_ON_FAILURE`, so that when
a "make test" run by CMake fails, verbose test output about the detail
of failure is available.
The existing test `x509parse_crt()` for X.509 CRT parsing
so far used the generic parsing API `mbedtls_x509_crt_parse()`
capable of parsing both PEM encoded and DER encoded certficates,
but was actually only used with DER encoded input data. Moreover,
as the purpose of the test is the testing of the core DER X.509 parsing
functionality, not the PEM vs. DER dispatch (which is now already tested
in the various `x509_crt_info()` tests), the call can be replaced with a
direct call to `mbedtls_x509_parse_crt_der()`.
This commit does that, and further adds to the test an analogous
call to the new API `mbedtls_x509_parse_crt_der_nocopy()` to test
copyless parsing of X.509 certificates.
Test that freshly-initialized contexts exhibit default behavior through
the API. Do this without depending on the internal representation of the
contexts. This provides better portability of our tests on compilers
like MSVC.
For must-fail asymmetric decryption tests, add an output size parameter
so that tests can directly control what output buffer size they allocate
and use independently from the key size used. This enables better
testing of behavior with various output buffer sizes.
When RSA decrypting, unlike with RSA encrypting, we sometimes expect the
output length will be less than the key size. For instance, in the case
where the plaintext is zero-length we expect the output length of the
decryption to be zero-length as well, not key size in length.
For must-fail tests, we don't expect output-buffer-sized RSA-decryption,
only that the output length is less than or equal to the output size, so
these tests remain unchanged.
Change the must-pass tests to expect that the actual output size is
equal to the expected length of the output buffer instead of always
being the key size.
Merge a development version of Mbed TLS 2.16.0 that doesn't have
parameter validation into development.
The following conflicts were resolved:
- Update ChangeLog to include release notes merged from development so
far, with a version of "2.14.0+01b34fb316a5" and release date of
"xxxx-xx-xx" to show this is not a released version, but instead a
snapshot of the development branch equivalent to version of the 2.14.0
with additional commits from the mbedtls/development branch up through
01b34fb316 included. Entries added for unreleased versions of Mbed
Crypto remain at the top of the file for Mbed TLS 2.xx.x.
- Replace the Mbed Crypto version of
mbedtls_rsa_rsaes_pkcs1_v15_decrypt() with the version from Mbed TLS
which fixes timing variations and memory access variations that could
lead to a Bleichenbacher-style padding oracle attack. This will
prevent using psa_asymmetric_decrypt() with zero-length output buffers
until a follow up commit is made to restore this capability.
- In ssl_srv.c, include changes for both the new ECDH interface and
opaque PSK as already added to development previously.
In one place, exercise_key was used in a such a way that if the test
failed inside exercise_key, the test suite would correctly report the
test as failed but would not report the exact location of the failure.
Fix this.
Add documentation for exercise_key that explains how to use it.
When all.sh invokes check_headers_in_cpp, a backup config.h exists. This
causes a stray difference vs cpp_dummy_build.cpp. Fix by only collecting
the *.h files in include/mbedtls.
Change-Id: Ifd415027e856858579a6699538f06fc49c793570
Additional changes to temporarily enable running tests:
ssl_srv.c and test_suite_ecdh use mbedtls_ecp_group_load instead of
mbedtls_ecdh_setup
test_suite_ctr_drbg uses mbedtls_ctr_drbg_update instead of
mbedtls_ctr_drbg_update_ret
test_psa_constant_names.py was originally written before the split of
crypto.h into crypto_values.h and more, so it now needs to read
crypto_values.h as well.
In both generate_psa_constants.py and test_psa_constant_names.py, read
crypto_extra.h as well. We don't currently define any value there, but
it's plausible that we will one day.
Calls to PSA_ALG_AEAD_WITH_DEFAULT_TAG_LENGTH and
PSA_ALG_FULL_LENGTH_MAC are not in canonical form, so exclude them
from the list of constructor macros to test.
Test psa_constant_names on many inputs. For each input, find out the
numerical value by compiling and running a C program, pass the
numerical value to psa_constant_names and compare the output with the
original input.
Gather inputs by parsing psa/crypto.h and
test_suite_psa_crypto_metadata.data. For macros that take an argument,
list some possible arguments using the parsed data.
Test a few cases. The logic to combine the constraint is similar to
the logic to combine the source and target, so it's ok to have less
parameter domain coverage for constraints.
Split the testing into tests that exercise policies in
test_suite_psa_crypto and tests that exercise slot content (slot
states, key material) in test_suite_psa_crypto_slot_management.
Test various cases of source and target policies with and without
wildcards. Missing: testing of the policy constraint on psa_copy_key
itself.
Test several key types (raw data, AES, RSA). Test with the
source or target being persistent.
Add failure tests (incompatible policies, source slot empty, target
slot occupied).
Remove front matter from our EC key format, to make it just the contents
of an ECPoint as defined by SEC1 section 2.3.3.
As a consequence of the simplification, remove the restriction on not
being able to use an ECDH key with ECDSA. There is no longer any OID
specified when importing a key, so we can't reject importing of an ECDH
key for the purpose of ECDSA based on the OID.
Remove pkcs-1 and rsaEncryption front matter from RSA public keys. Move
code that was shared between RSA and other key types (like EC keys) to
be used only with non-RSA keys.
Remove the type and bits arguments to psa_allocate_key() and
psa_create_key(). They can be useful if the implementation wants to
know exactly how much space to allocate for the slot, but many
implementations (including ours) don't care, and it's possible to work
around their lack by deferring size-dependent actions to the time when
the key material is created. They are a burden to applications and
make the API more complex, and the benefits aren't worth it.
Change the API and adapt the implementation, the units test and the
sample code accordingly.
You can use PSA_ALG_ANY_HASH to build the algorithm value for a
hash-and-sign algorithm in a policy. Then the policy allows usage with
this hash-and-sign family with any hash.
Test that PSA_ALG_ANY_HASH-based policies allow a specific hash, but
not a different hash-and-sign family. Test that PSA_ALG_ANY_HASH is
not valid for operations, only in policies.
Test for a subclass of public-key algorithm: those that perform
full-domain hashing, i.e. algorithms that can be broken down as
sign(key, hash(message)).
Wildcard patterns now work with command line COMPONENT arguments
without --except as well as with. You can now run e.g.
`all.sh "check_*` to run all the sanity checks.
After backing up and restoring config.h, `git diff-files` may report
it as potentially-changed because it isn't sure whether the index is
up to date. Use `git diff` instead: it actually reads the file.
Only look for armcc if component_build_armcc is to be executed,
instead of requiring the option --no-armcc.
You can still pass --no-armcc, but it's no longer required when
listing components to run. With no list of components or an exclude
list on the command line, --no-armcc is equivalent to having
build_armcc in the exclude list.
Build the list of components to run in $RUN_COMPONENTS as part of
command line parsing. After parsing the command line, it no longer
matters how this list was built.
Extract the list of available components by looking for definitions of
functions called component_xxx. The previous code explicitly listed
all components in run_all_components, which opened the risk of
forgetting to list a component there.
Add a conditional execution facility: if a function support_xxx exists
and returns false then component_xxx is not executed (except when the
command line lists an explicit set of components to execute).
Wildcard patterns now work with command line COMPONENT arguments
without --except as well as with. You can now run e.g.
`all.sh "check_*` to run all the sanity checks.
After backing up and restoring config.h, `git diff-files` may report
it as potentially-changed because it isn't sure whether the index is
up to date. Use `git diff` instead: it actually reads the file.
Only look for armcc if component_build_armcc is to be executed,
instead of requiring the option --no-armcc.
You can still pass --no-armcc, but it's no longer required when
listing components to run. With no list of components or an exclude
list on the command line, --no-armcc is equivalent to having
build_armcc in the exclude list.
Build the list of components to run in $RUN_COMPONENTS as part of
command line parsing. After parsing the command line, it no longer
matters how this list was built.
Extract the list of available components by looking for definitions of
functions called component_xxx. The previous code explicitly listed
all components in run_all_components, which opened the risk of
forgetting to list a component there.
Add a conditional execution facility: if a function support_xxx exists
and returns false then component_xxx is not executed (except when the
command line lists an explicit set of components to execute).
MAKEFLAGS was set to -j if it was already set, instead of being set if
not previously set as intended. So now all.sh will do parallel builds
if invoked without MAKEFLAGS in the environment.
Don't bail out of all.sh if the OS isn't Linux. We only expect
everything to pass on a recent Linux x86_64, but it's useful to call
all.sh to run some components on any platform.
In all.sh, always run both MemorySanitizer and Valgrind. Valgrind is
slower than ASan and MSan but finds some things that they don't.
Run MSan unconditionally, not just on Linux/x86_64. MSan is supported
on some other OSes and CPUs these days.
Use `all.sh --except test_memsan` if you want to omit MSan because it
isn't supported on your platform. Use `all.sh --except test_memcheck`
if you want to omit Valgrind because it's too slow.
Make the test scripts more portable (tested on FreeBSD): don't insist
on GNU sed, and recognize amd64 as well as x86_64 for `uname -m`. The
`make` utility must still be GNU make.
Call `set disable-randomization off` only if it seems to be supported.
The goal is to neither get an error about disable-randomization not
being supported (e.g. on FreeBSD), nor get an error if it is supported
but fails (e.g. on Ubuntu).
Only fiddle with disable-randomization from all.sh, which cares
because it reports the failure of ASLR disabling as an error. If a
developer invokes the Gdb script manually, a warning about ASLR
doesn't matter.
Use `cmake -D CMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Asan` rather than manually setting
`-fsanitize=address`. This lets cmake determine the necessary compiler
and linker flags.
With UNSAFE_BUILD on, force -Wno-error. This is necessary to build
with MBEDTLS_TEST_NULL_ENTROPY.
MAKEFLAGS was set to -j if it was already set, instead of being set if
not previously set as intended. So now all.sh will do parallel builds
if invoked without MAKEFLAGS in the environment.
Don't bail out of all.sh if the OS isn't Linux. We only expect
everything to pass on a recent Linux x86_64, but it's useful to call
all.sh to run some components on any platform.
In all.sh, always run both MemorySanitizer and Valgrind. Valgrind is
slower than ASan and MSan but finds some things that they don't.
Run MSan unconditionally, not just on Linux/x86_64. MSan is supported
on some other OSes and CPUs these days.
Use `all.sh --except test_memsan` if you want to omit MSan because it
isn't supported on your platform. Use `all.sh --except test_memcheck`
if you want to omit Valgrind because it's too slow.
Make the test scripts more portable (tested on FreeBSD): don't insist
on GNU sed, and recognize amd64 as well as x86_64 for `uname -m`. The
`make` utility must still be GNU make.
Call `set disable-randomization off` only if it seems to be supported.
The goal is to neither get an error about disable-randomization not
being supported (e.g. on FreeBSD), nor get an error if it is supported
but fails (e.g. on Ubuntu).
Only fiddle with disable-randomization from all.sh, which cares
because it reports the failure of ASLR disabling as an error. If a
developer invokes the Gdb script manually, a warning about ASLR
doesn't matter.
Use `cmake -D CMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Asan` rather than manually setting
`-fsanitize=address`. This lets cmake determine the necessary compiler
and linker flags.
With UNSAFE_BUILD on, force -Wno-error. This is necessary to build
with MBEDTLS_TEST_NULL_ENTROPY.
fixed processing of PSA macros in check names script.
This required changes in:
*list-macros.sh to scan the PSA headers
*check-names to scan PSA files and allow PSA_* macro names