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30a9d5d1a7
The callback data allows passing context specific data from the application of the DRBG to to the entropy callbacks. This a rather specialized feature which is useful for implementing known answer tests (KATs) or deterministic signatures (RFC6979), which require passing a specified entropy and nonce for instantiating the DRBG. Reviewed-by: Shane Lontis <shane.lontis@oracle.com> (Merged from https://github.com/openssl/openssl/pull/10950)
146 lines
5.9 KiB
Plaintext
146 lines
5.9 KiB
Plaintext
=pod
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=head1 NAME
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ssl_ct_validation_cb,
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SSL_enable_ct, SSL_CTX_enable_ct, SSL_disable_ct, SSL_CTX_disable_ct,
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SSL_set_ct_validation_callback, SSL_CTX_set_ct_validation_callback,
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SSL_ct_is_enabled, SSL_CTX_ct_is_enabled -
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control Certificate Transparency policy
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=head1 SYNOPSIS
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#include <openssl/ssl.h>
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typedef int (*ssl_ct_validation_cb)(const CT_POLICY_EVAL_CTX *ctx,
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const STACK_OF(SCT) *scts, void *arg);
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int SSL_enable_ct(SSL *s, int validation_mode);
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int SSL_CTX_enable_ct(SSL_CTX *ctx, int validation_mode);
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int SSL_set_ct_validation_callback(SSL *s, ssl_ct_validation_cb callback,
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void *arg);
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int SSL_CTX_set_ct_validation_callback(SSL_CTX *ctx,
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ssl_ct_validation_cb callback,
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void *arg);
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void SSL_disable_ct(SSL *s);
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void SSL_CTX_disable_ct(SSL_CTX *ctx);
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int SSL_ct_is_enabled(const SSL *s);
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int SSL_CTX_ct_is_enabled(const SSL_CTX *ctx);
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=head1 DESCRIPTION
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SSL_enable_ct() and SSL_CTX_enable_ct() enable the processing of signed
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certificate timestamps (SCTs) either for a given SSL connection or for all
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connections that share the given SSL context, respectively.
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This is accomplished by setting a built-in CT validation callback.
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The behaviour of the callback is determined by the B<validation_mode> argument,
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which can be either of B<SSL_CT_VALIDATION_PERMISSIVE> or
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B<SSL_CT_VALIDATION_STRICT> as described below.
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If B<validation_mode> is equal to B<SSL_CT_VALIDATION_STRICT>, then in a full
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TLS handshake with the verification mode set to B<SSL_VERIFY_PEER>, if the peer
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presents no valid SCTs the handshake will be aborted.
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If the verification mode is B<SSL_VERIFY_NONE>, the handshake will continue
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despite lack of valid SCTs.
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However, in that case if the verification status before the built-in callback
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was B<X509_V_OK> it will be set to B<X509_V_ERR_NO_VALID_SCTS> after the
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callback.
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Applications can call L<SSL_get_verify_result(3)> to check the status at
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handshake completion, even after session resumption since the verification
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status is part of the saved session state.
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See L<SSL_set_verify(3)>, <SSL_get_verify_result(3)>, L<SSL_session_reused(3)>.
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If B<validation_mode> is equal to B<SSL_CT_VALIDATION_PERMISSIVE>, then the
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handshake continues, and the verification status is not modified, regardless of
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the validation status of any SCTs.
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The application can still inspect the validation status of the SCTs at
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handshake completion.
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Note that with session resumption there will not be any SCTs presented during
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the handshake.
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Therefore, in applications that delay SCT policy enforcement until after
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handshake completion, such delayed SCT checks should only be performed when the
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session is not resumed.
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SSL_set_ct_validation_callback() and SSL_CTX_set_ct_validation_callback()
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register a custom callback that may implement a different policy than either of
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the above.
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This callback can examine the peer's SCTs and determine whether they are
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sufficient to allow the connection to continue.
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The TLS handshake is aborted if the verification mode is not B<SSL_VERIFY_NONE>
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and the callback returns a non-positive result.
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An arbitrary callback data argument, B<arg>, can be passed in when setting
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the callback.
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This will be passed to the callback whenever it is invoked.
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Ownership of this context remains with the caller.
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If no callback is set, SCTs will not be requested and Certificate Transparency
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validation will not occur.
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No callback will be invoked when the peer presents no certificate, e.g. by
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employing an anonymous (aNULL) cipher suite.
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In that case the handshake continues as it would had no callback been
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requested.
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Callbacks are also not invoked when the peer certificate chain is invalid or
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validated via DANE-TA(2) or DANE-EE(3) TLSA records which use a private X.509
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PKI, or no X.509 PKI at all, respectively.
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Clients that require SCTs are expected to not have enabled any aNULL ciphers
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nor to have specified server verification via DANE-TA(2) or DANE-EE(3) TLSA
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records.
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SSL_disable_ct() and SSL_CTX_disable_ct() turn off CT processing, whether
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enabled via the built-in or the custom callbacks, by setting a NULL callback.
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These may be implemented as macros.
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SSL_ct_is_enabled() and SSL_CTX_ct_is_enabled() return 1 if CT processing is
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enabled via either SSL_enable_ct() or a non-null custom callback, and 0
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otherwise.
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=head1 NOTES
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When SCT processing is enabled, OCSP stapling will be enabled. This is because
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one possible source of SCTs is the OCSP response from a server.
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The time returned by SSL_SESSION_get_time() will be used to evaluate whether any
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presented SCTs have timestamps that are in the future (and therefore invalid).
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=head1 RESTRICTIONS
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Certificate Transparency validation cannot be enabled and so a callback cannot
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be set if a custom client extension handler has been registered to handle SCT
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extensions (B<TLSEXT_TYPE_signed_certificate_timestamp>).
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=head1 RETURN VALUES
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SSL_enable_ct(), SSL_CTX_enable_ct(), SSL_CTX_set_ct_validation_callback() and
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SSL_set_ct_validation_callback() return 1 if the B<callback> is successfully
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set.
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They return 0 if an error occurs, e.g. a custom client extension handler has
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been setup to handle SCTs.
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SSL_disable_ct() and SSL_CTX_disable_ct() do not return a result.
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SSL_CTX_ct_is_enabled() and SSL_ct_is_enabled() return a 1 if a non-null CT
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validation callback is set, or 0 if no callback (or equivalently a NULL
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callback) is set.
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=head1 SEE ALSO
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L<ssl(7)>,
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<SSL_get_verify_result(3)>,
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L<SSL_session_reused(3)>,
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L<SSL_set_verify(3)>,
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L<SSL_CTX_set_verify(3)>,
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L<SSL_SESSION_get_time(3)>
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=head1 COPYRIGHT
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Copyright 2016-2017 The OpenSSL Project Authors. All Rights Reserved.
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Licensed under the Apache License 2.0 (the "License"). You may not use
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this file except in compliance with the License. You can obtain a copy
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in the file LICENSE in the source distribution or at
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L<https://www.openssl.org/source/license.html>.
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=cut
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