Fix SSL_VERIFY_CLIENT_ONCE

The flag SSL_VERIFY_CLIENT_ONCE is documented as follows:

  B<Server mode:> only request a client certificate on the initial TLS/SSL
  handshake. Do not ask for a client certificate again in case of a
  renegotiation. This flag must be used together with SSL_VERIFY_PEER.

  B<Client mode:> ignored

But the implementation actually did nothing. After the server sends its
ServerKeyExchange message, the code was checking s->session->peer to see if
it is NULL. If it was set then it did not ask for another client
certificate. However s->session->peer will only be set in the event of a
resumption, but a ServerKeyExchange message is only sent in the event of a
full handshake (i.e. no resumption).

The documentation suggests that the original intention was for this to
have an effect on renegotiation, and resumption doesn't come into it.

The fix is to properly check for renegotiation, not whether there is already
a client certificate in the session.

As far as I can tell this has been broken for a *long* time.

Reviewed-by: Richard Levitte <levitte@openssl.org>
(Merged from https://github.com/openssl/openssl/pull/1982)
This commit is contained in:
Matt Caswell 2016-11-22 16:23:22 +00:00
parent a6fd7c1dbe
commit a03a9dbe2a

View File

@ -353,7 +353,7 @@ static int send_certificate_request(SSL *s)
* if SSL_VERIFY_CLIENT_ONCE is set, don't request cert
* during re-negotiation:
*/
&& ((s->session->peer == NULL) ||
&& (s->s3->tmp.finish_md_len == 0 ||
!(s->verify_mode & SSL_VERIFY_CLIENT_ONCE))
/*
* never request cert in anonymous ciphersuites (see