We need a way to parse a rsa certificate request and return the public
key and subject names. The new function X509reqtoRSApub() works the
same way as X509toRSApub() but on a certificate request.
We also need to support certificates that are valid for multiple domain
names (as tlshand does not support certificate selection). For this
reason, a comma separated list is returned as the certificate subject,
making it symmetric to X509rsareq() handling.
A little helper is provided with this change (auth/x5092pub) that takes
a certificate (or a certificate request when -r flag is provided) and
outputs the RSA public key in plan 9 format appended with the subject
attribute.
As checking for all zero has to be done in a timing-safe
way to avoid a side channel, it is best todo this here
instead of letting the caller deal with it.
This adds a return type of int to curve25519_dh_finish()
where returning 0 means we got a all zero shared key.
RFC7748 states:
The check for the all-zero value results from the fact
that the X25519 function produces that value if it
operates on an input corresponding to a point with small
order, where the order divides the cofactor of the curve.
kvik writes:
I needed to convert the RSA private key that was laying around in
secstore into a format understood by UNIX® tools like SSH.
With asn12rsa(8) we can go from the ASN.1/DER to Plan 9 format, but not
back - so I wrote the libsec function asn1encodeRSApriv(2) and used it in
rsa2asn1(8) by adding the -a flag which causes the full private key to be
encoded and output.
Instead of only using a hash over the whole certificate for
white/black-listing, now we can also use a hash over the
Subject Public Key Info (SPKI) field of the certificate which
contians the public key algorithm and the public key itself.
This allows certificates to be renewed independendtly of the
public key.
X509dump() now prints the public key thumbprint in addition
to the certificate thumbprint.
tlsclient will print the certificate when run with -D flag.
okCertificate() will print the public key thumbprint in its
error string when no match has been found.
Add assembler versions for aes_encrypt/aes_decrypt and the key
setup using AES-NI instruction set. This makes aes_encrypt and
aes_decrypt into function pointers which get initialized by
the first call to setupAESstate().
Note that the expanded round key words are *NOT* stored in big
endian order as with the portable implementation. For that reason
the AESstate.ekey and AESstate.dkey fields have been changed to
void* forcing an error when someone is accessing the roundkey
words. One offender was aesXCBmac, which doesnt appear to be
used and the code looks horrible so it has been deleted.
The AES-NI implementation is for amd64 only as it requires the
kernel to save/restore the FPU state across syscalls and
pagefaults.
the previous implementation was not portable at all, assuming
little endian in gf_mulx() and that one can cast unaligned
pointers to ulong in xor128(). also the error code is likely
to be ignored, so better abort() when the length is not a
multiple of the AES block size.
we also pass in full AESstate structures now instead of
the expanded key longs, so that we do not need to hardcode
the number of rounds. this allows each indiviaul keys to
be bigger than 128 bit.
initThumbprints() now takes an application tag argument
so x509 and ssh can coexist.
the thumbprint entries can now hold both sha1 and sha256
hashes. okThumbprint() now takes a len argument for the
hash length used.
the new function okCertificate() hashes the certificate
with both and checks for any matches.
on failure, okCertificate() returns 0 and sets error string.
we also check for include loops now in thumbfiles, limiting
the number of includes to 8.