This commit temporarily comments the copying of the negotiated CIDs
into the established ::mbedtls_ssl_transform in mbedtls_ssl_derive_keys()
until the CID feature has been fully implemented.
While mbedtls_ssl_decrypt_buf() and mbedtls_ssl_encrypt_buf() do
support CID-based record protection by now and can be unit tested,
the following two changes in the rest of the stack are still missing
before CID-based record protection can be integrated:
- Parsing of CIDs in incoming records.
- Allowing the new CID record content type for incoming records.
- Dealing with a change of record content type during record
decryption.
Further, since mbedtls_ssl_get_peer_cid() judges the use of CIDs by
the CID fields in the currently transforms, this change also requires
temporarily disabling some grepping for ssl_client2 / ssl_server2
debug output in ssl-opt.sh.
Part of the record encryption/decryption tests is to gradually
increase the space available at the front and/or at the back of
a record and observe when encryption starts to succeed. If exactly
one of the two parameters is varied at a time, the expectation is
that encryption will continue to succeed once it has started
succeeding (that's not true if both pre- and post-space are varied
at the same time).
Moreover, previously the test would take turns when choosing which
transform should be used for encryption, and which for decryption.
With the introduction of the CID feaature, this switching of transforms
doesn't align with the expectation of eventual success of the encryption,
since the overhead of encryption might be different for the parties,
because both parties may use different CIDs for their outgoing records.
This commit modifies the tests to not take turns between transforms,
but to always use the same transforms for encryption and decryption
during a single round of the test.
This commit adds tests to check the behavior of the record encryption
routine `ssl_encrypt_buf` when the buffer surrounding the plaintext is
too small to hold the expansion in the beginning and end (due to IV's,
padding, and MAC).
Each test starts successively increases the space available at the
beginning, end, or both, of the record buffer, and checks that the
record encryption either fails with a BUFFER_TOO_SMALL error, or
that it succeeds. Moreover, if it succeeds, it is checked that
decryption succeeds, too, and results in the original record.
This commit adds tests exercising mutually inverse pairs of
record encryption and decryption transformations for the various
transformation types allowed in TLS: Stream, CBC, and AEAD.
requires_config_enabled doesn't support multiple config options.
Tests having multiple configuration dependencies must be prefixed
with multiple invocations of requires_config_enabled instead.
Run ssl-opt.sh on x86_32 with ASan. This may detect bugs that only
show up on 32-bit platforms, for example due to size_t overflow.
For this component, turn off some memory management features that are
not useful, potentially slow, and may reduce ASan's effectiveness at
catching buffer overflows.
* origin/pr/2470:
Silence pylint
check-files.py: readability improvement in permission check
check-files.py: use class fields for class-wide constants
check-files.py: clean up class structure
abi_check.py: Document more methods
check-files.py: document some classes and methods
Fix pylint errors going uncaught
Call pylint3, not pylint
New, documented pylint configuration
* origin/pr/2364:
Increase okm_hex buffer to contain null character
Minor modifications to hkdf test
Add explanation for okm_string size
Update ChangeLog
Reduce buffer size of okm
Reduce Stack usage of hkdf test function
* restricted/pr/553:
Fix mbedtls_ecdh_get_params with new ECDH context
Add changelog entry for mbedtls_ecdh_get_params robustness
Fix ecdh_get_params with mismatching group
Add test case for ecdh_get_params with mismatching group
Add test case for ecdh_calc_secret
Fix typo in documentation
It was failing to set the key in the ENCRYPT direction before encrypting.
This just happened to work for GCM and CCM.
After re-encrypting, compare the length to the expected ciphertext
length not the plaintext length. Again this just happens to work for
GCM and CCM since they do not perform any kind of padding.