Since the mbed TLS implementation of rng wrapper returns the size of random
data generated upon success - check for it explicitly.
Signed-off-by: Andrzej Kurek <andrzej.kurek@arm.com>
Lack of this requirement caused warning when compiling the
x509 test suites with config-thread.h from example configs,
resulting in an error when running from test-ref-configs.pl.
Signed-off-by: Andrzej Kurek <andrzej.kurek@arm.com>
Conflicts:
mbedtls.doxyfile - PROJECT_NAME - mbed TLS v2.16.6 chosen.
doc_mainpage.h - mbed TLS v2.16.6 version chosen.
hmac_drbg.h - line 260, extended description chosen.
- line 313, extended description chosen.
- line 338, extended description chosen.
version.h - 2.16.6 chosen.
CMakeLists.txt - 2.16.6 chosen.
test_suite_version.data - 2.16.6 chosen.
Makefile - 141 - manual correction - baremetal version of C_SOURCE_FILES
with variables for directories plus 2.16.6 CTAGS addition.
pkparse.c - lines 846 onwards - the asn1_get_nonzero_mpi implementation chosen.
ssl_tls.c - line 5269 - edited manually, left the ret=0, because baremetal has
a different behaviour since commit 87b5626, but added a debug
message that's new in 2.16.6.
all.sh:
- component_build_deprecated - chosen the refactored version from 2.16.6,
but with extra flags from baremetal.
- rest of the _no_xxx tests - merged make options to have PTHREAD=1 and
other changes from 2.16.6 (like -O1 instead of -O0).
- component_build_arm_none_eabi_gcc_no_64bit_multiplication - added
TINYCRYPT_BUILD=0 to the 2.16.6 version of make.
x509/req_app.c - left baremetal log but with mbedtls_exit( 0 ) call.
x509/crl_app.c - left baremetal log but with mbedtls_exit( 0 ) call.
x509/cert_app.c - left baremetal log but with mbedtls_exit( 0 ) call.
ssl/ssl_mail_client.c - left baremetal log but with mbedtls_exit( 0 ) call.
ssl/ssl_pthread_server.c - left baremetal log but with mbedtls_exit( 0 ) call.
ssl/ssl_fork_server.c - left baremetal log but with mbedtls_exit( 0 ) call.
ssl_client1.c - line 54 - left baremetal log but with mbedtls_exit( 0 ) call.
ssl_client2.c - line 54 - left baremetal log but with mbedtls_exit( 0 ) call.
- line 132 - new options of both branches added.
- skip close notify handled as in 2.16.6, but with `ssl` instead of `&ssl`.
- Merged the 2.16.6 usage split with additional baremetal usages.
- Merged options from baremetal and 2.16.6.
ssl_server.c - left baremetal log but with mbedtls_exit( 0 ) call.
ssl_server2.c - Merged the 2.16.6 usage split with additional baremetal usages.
config.pl - fixed missing defines from the documentation, removed duplicates,
and reorganised so that the documentation and excluded list
are ordered in the same way.
test_suite_x509parse.data - only added the two new pathlen tests.
x509_crt.c - change the return code by removing
MBEDTLS_ERR_X509_INVALID_EXTENSIONS, since it's added by
x509_crt_frame_parse_ext not by an "or", but by "+=".
Changelog - Assigned all entries to appropriate sections.
ssl-opt.sh - line 8263 - merged options.
- removed lines 1165 - 1176 - there was a duplicate test, probably
an artifact of previous merges.
check-files.py - sticked to old formatting.
Signed-off-by: Andrzej Kurek <andrzej.kurek@arm.com>
The signature of mbedtls_mpi_cmp_mpi_ct() meant to support using it in
place of mbedtls_mpi_cmp_mpi(). This meant full comparison functionality
and a signed result.
To make the function more universal and friendly to constant time
coding, we change the result type to unsigned. Theoretically, we could
encode the comparison result in an unsigned value, but it would be less
intuitive.
Therefore we won't be able to represent the result as unsigned anymore
and the functionality will be constrained to checking if the first
operand is less than the second. This is sufficient to support the
current use case and to check any relationship between MPIs.
The only drawback is that we need to call the function twice when
checking for equality, but this can be optimised later if an when it is
needed.
You can't reuse a CTR_DRBG context without free()ing it and
re-init()ing it. This generally happened to work, but was never
guaranteed. It could have failed with alternative implementations of
the AES module because mbedtls_ctr_drbg_seed() calls
mbedtls_aes_init() on a context which is already initialized if
mbedtls_ctr_drbg_seed() hasn't been called before, plausibly causing a
memory leak.
Calling free() and seed() with no intervening init fails when
MBEDTLS_THREADING_C is enabled and all-bits-zero is not a valid mutex
representation.
mbedtls_ctr_drbg_seed() always set the entropy length to the default,
so a call to mbedtls_ctr_drbg_set_entropy_len() before seed() had no
effect. Change this to the more intuitive behavior that
set_entropy_len() sets the entropy length and seed() respects that and
only uses the default entropy length if there was no call to
set_entropy_len().
The former test-only function mbedtls_ctr_drbg_seed_entropy_len() is
no longer used, but keep it for strict ABI compatibility.
mbedtls_hmac_drbg_seed() always set the entropy length to the default,
so a call to mbedtls_hmac_drbg_set_entropy_len() before seed() had no
effect. Change this to the more intuitive behavior that
set_entropy_len() sets the entropy length and seed() respects that and
only uses the default entropy length if there was no call to
set_entropy_len().
The documentation of HMAC_DRBG erroneously claimed that
mbedtls_hmac_drbg_set_entropy_len() had an impact on the initial
seeding. This is in fact not the case: mbedtls_hmac_drbg_seed() forces
the entropy length to its chosen value. Fix the documentation.
The documentation of CTR_DRBG erroneously claimed that
mbedtls_ctr_drbg_set_entropy_len() had an impact on the initial
seeding. This is in fact not the case: mbedtls_ctr_drbg_seed() forces
the initial seeding to grab MBEDTLS_CTR_DRBG_ENTROPY_LEN bytes of
entropy. Fix the documentation and rewrite the discussion of the
entropy length and the security strength accordingly.
Explain how MBEDTLS_CTR_DRBG_ENTROPY_LEN is set next to the security
strength statement, rather than giving a partial explanation (current
setting only) in the documentation of MBEDTLS_CTR_DRBG_ENTROPY_LEN.
NIST and many other sources call it a "personalization string", and
certainly not "device-specific identifiers" which is actually somewhat
misleading since this is just one of many things that might go into a
personalization string.
Improve the formatting and writing of the documentation based on what
had been done for CTR_DRBG.
Document the maximum size and nullability of some buffer parameters.
Document that a derivation function is used.
Document the security strength of the DRBG depending on the
compile-time configuration and how it is set up. In particular,
document how the nonce specified in SP 800-90A is set.
Mention how to link the ctr_drbg module with the entropy module.
* State explicit whether several numbers are in bits or bytes.
* Clarify whether buffer pointer parameters can be NULL.
* Explain the value of constants that are dependent on the configuration.
There is a 50% performance drop in the SCA_CM enabled encrypt and
decrypt functions. Therefore use the older version of encrypt/decypt
functions when SCA_CM is disabled.
* upstream/pr/2945:
Rename macro MBEDTLS_MAX_RAND_DELAY
Update signature of mbedtls_platform_random_delay
Replace mbedtls_platform_enforce_volatile_reads 2
Replace mbedtls_platform_enforce_volatile_reads
Add more variation to random delay countermeasure
Add random delay to enforce_volatile_reads
Update comments of mbedtls_platform_random_delay
Follow Mbed TLS coding style
Add random delay function to platform_utils
The MBEDTLS_ERR_SSL_WANT_READ and MBEDTLS_ERR_SSL_WANT_WRITE are
errors that can be ignored, so increase the hamming distance between
them and the non-ignorable errors and keep still some distance from
a success case. This mitigates an attack where single bit-flipping could
change a non-ignorable error to being an ignorable one.
- Add configuration for AES_SCA_COUNTERMEASURES to config.h. By
default the feature is disabled.
- Add AES_SCA_COUNTERMEASURES configuration check to check_config.h
- Add AES_SCA_COUNTERMEASURES test to all.sh
This commit first changes the return convention of EccPoint_mult_safer() so
that it properly reports when faults are detected. Then all functions that
call it need to be changed to (1) follow the same return convention and (2)
properly propagate UECC_FAULT_DETECTED when it occurs.
Here's the reverse call graph from EccPoint_mult_safer() to the rest of the
library (where return values are translated to the MBEDTLS_ERR_ space) and test
functions (where expected return values are asserted explicitly).
EccPoint_mult_safer()
EccPoint_compute_public_key()
uECC_compute_public_key()
pkparse.c
tests/suites/test_suite_pkparse.function
uECC_make_key_with_d()
uECC_make_key()
ssl_cli.c
ssl_srv.c
tests/suites/test_suite_pk.function
tests/suites/test_suite_tinycrypt.function
uECC_shared_secret()
ssl_tls.c
tests/suites/test_suite_tinycrypt.function
uECC_sign_with_k()
uECC_sign()
pk.c
tests/suites/test_suite_tinycrypt.function
Note: in uECC_sign_with_k() a test for uECC_vli_isZero(p) is suppressed
because it is redundant with a more thorough test (point validity) done at the
end of EccPoint_mult_safer(). This redundancy was introduced in a previous
commit but not noticed earlier.
We don't really need a secure hash for that, something like CRC32 would
probably be enough - but we have SHA-256 handy, not CRC32, so use that for the
sake of simplicity.
By semi-internal I mean functions that are only public because they're used in
more than once compilation unit in the library (for example in ecc.c and
ecc_dsa.c) but should not really be part of the public-facing API.
Same motivation as for the other parameters. This is the last one, making the
curve structure empty, so it's left with a dummy parameter for legal reasons.
-Add flow monitor, loop integrity check and variable doubling to
harden mbedtls_hmac_drbg_update_ret.
-Use longer hamming distance for nonce usage in hmac_drbg_reseed_core
-Return actual value instead of success in mbedtls_hmac_drbg_seed and
mbedtls_hmac_drbg_seed_buf
-Check illegal condition in hmac_drbg_reseed_core.
-Double buf/buf_len variables in mbedtls_hmac_drbg_random_with_add
-Add more hamming distance to MBEDTLS_HMAC_DRBG_PR_ON/OFF
This commit removes from the TinyCrypt header and source code files, the
configuration condition on MBEDTLS_USE_TINYCRYPT to include the file
contents.
This is to allow use of the library by the Factory Tool without enabling
MBEDTLS_USE_TINYCRYPT, and also removes a modification we've made to make the
code closer to the upstream TinyCrypt making it easier to maintain.
Before this commit, if a certificate only had one issue (for example, if the
"untrusted" bit was the only set in flags), an attacker that could flip this
single bit between the moment it's set and the moment flags are checked before
returning from mbedtls_x509_crt_verify() could make the entire verification
routine appear to succeed (return 0 with no bit set in flags).
Avoid that by making sure that flags always has either 0 or at least 9 bits
set during the execution of the function. However, to preserve the API, clear
the 8 extra bits before returning. This doesn't open the door to other
attacks, as fortunately the API already had redundancy: either both flags and
the return value are 0, or flags has bits set and the return value is non-zero
with at least 16 bits set (assuming 32-bit 2-complement ints).
Inspection of the generated assembly showed that before this commit, armcc 5
was optimizing away the successive reads to the volatile local variable that's
used for double-checks. Inspection also reveals that inserting a call to an
external function is enough to prevent it from doing that.
The tested versions of ARM-GCC, Clang and Armcc 6 (aka armclang) all keep the
double read, with our without a call to an external function in the middle.
The inserted function can also be changed to insert a random delay if
desired in the future, as it is appropriately places between the reads.
This can be used by Mbed TLS functions in any module to signal that a fault
attack is likely happening, so this can be appropriately handled by the
application (report, fall back to safer mode or even halt, etc.)
Previously it was returning 0 or 1, so flipping a single bit in the return
value reversed its meaning. Now it's returning the diff itself.
This is safe because in the two places it's used (signature verification and
point validation), invalid values will have a large number of bits differing
from the expected value, so diff will have a large Hamming weight.
An alternative would be to return for example -!(diff == 0), but the
comparison itself is prone to attacks (glitching the appropriate flag in the
CPU flags register, or the conditional branch if the comparison uses one). So
we'd need to protect the comparison, and it's simpler to just skip it and
return diff itself.
This is a first step in protecting against fault injection attacks: the
attacker can no longer change failure into success by flipping a single bit.
Additional steps are needed to prevent other attacks (instruction skip etc)
and will be the object of future commits.
The return value of uECC_vli_equal() should be protected as well, which will
be done in a future commit as well.
Currently functions that may return success or failure tend to do so by
returning 0 or 1. If an active physical attacker can flip a bit in memory or
registers at the right time, they may easily change a failure value into a
success value, with potentially catastrophic security consequences.
As typical attackers can only flip a few bits, an element of protection
against such attacks is to ensure a sufficient Hamming distance between
failure values and the success value. This commit introduces such values,
which will put to use in critical functions in future commits.
In addition to SUCCESS and FAILURE, a third value ATTACK_DETECTED is
introduced, which can be used later when suspicious-looking events are noticed
(static data changed when it shouldn't, double condition checking returning
inconsistent results, etc.).
Values are chosen so that Hamming distances are large, and that no value is
the complement of another, in order to avoid unwanted compiler optimisations.
Note: the error values used by Mbed TLS are already safe (assuming 32-bit
integers) as they are of the form -x with x in the range [1, 2^15) so their
Hamming distance with the success value (0) is at least 17, so it's hard for
an attacker to turn an error value into the success value (or vice-versa).