| Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
|
got the build runner compiling
|
|
|
|
The TLS 1.2 implementation was incorrectly hardcoded to always send the
secp256r1 public key in the client key exchange message, regardless of
which elliptic curve the server actually negotiated.
This caused TLS handshake failures with servers that preferred other curves
like X25519.
This fix:
- Tracks the negotiated named group from the server key exchange message
- Dynamically selects the correct public key (X25519, secp256r1, or
secp384r1) based on what the server negotiated
- Properly constructs the client key exchange message with the
appropriate key size for each curve type
Fixes TLS 1.2 connections to servers like ziglang.freetls.fastly.net
that prefer X25519 over secp256r1.
|
|
* std.Io.Reader: fix confused semantics of rebase. Before it was
ambiguous whether it was supposed to be based on end or seek. Now it
is clearly based on seek, with an added assertion for clarity.
* std.crypto.tls.Client: fix panic due to not enough buffer size
available. Also, avoid unnecessary rebasing.
* std.http.Reader: introduce max_head_len to limit HTTP header length.
This prevents crash in underlying reader which may require a minimum
buffer length.
* std.http.Client: choose better buffer sizes for streams and TLS
client. Crucially, the buffer shared by HTTP reader and TLS client
needs to be big enough for all http headers *and* the max TLS record
size. Bump HTTP header size default from 4K to 8K.
fixes #24872
I have noticed however that there are still fetch problems
|
|
simplifies the logic & makes it respect limit
|
|
* TLS: add missing assert for output buffer length requirement
* TLS: add missing flushes
* TLS: add flush implementation
* TLS: finish drain implementation
* HTTP: correct buffer sizes for TLS
* HTTP: expose a getReadError method on Connection
* HTTP: add missing flush on sendBodyComplete
* Fetch: remove unwanted deinit
* Fetch: improve error reporting
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
To quote the language reference,
It is generally better to let the compiler decide when to inline a
function, except for these scenarios:
* To change how many stack frames are in the call stack, for debugging
purposes.
* To force comptime-ness of the arguments to propagate to the return
value of the function, as in the above example.
* Real world performance measurements demand it. Don't guess!
Note that inline actually restricts what the compiler is allowed to do.
This can harm binary size, compilation speed, and even runtime
performance.
`zig run lib/std/crypto/benchmark.zig -OReleaseFast`
[-before-] vs {+after+}
md5: [-990-] {+998+} MiB/s
sha1: [-1144-] {+1140+} MiB/s
sha256: [-2267-] {+2275+} MiB/s
sha512: [-762-] {+767+} MiB/s
sha3-256: [-680-] {+683+} MiB/s
sha3-512: [-362-] {+363+} MiB/s
shake-128: [-835-] {+839+} MiB/s
shake-256: [-680-] {+681+} MiB/s
turboshake-128: [-1567-] {+1570+} MiB/s
turboshake-256: [-1276-] {+1282+} MiB/s
blake2s: [-778-] {+789+} MiB/s
blake2b: [-1071-] {+1086+} MiB/s
blake3: [-1148-] {+1137+} MiB/s
ghash: [-10044-] {+10033+} MiB/s
polyval: [-9726-] {+10033+} MiB/s
poly1305: [-2486-] {+2703+} MiB/s
hmac-md5: [-991-] {+998+} MiB/s
hmac-sha1: [-1134-] {+1137+} MiB/s
hmac-sha256: [-2265-] {+2288+} MiB/s
hmac-sha512: [-765-] {+764+} MiB/s
siphash-2-4: [-4410-] {+4438+} MiB/s
siphash-1-3: [-7144-] {+7225+} MiB/s
siphash128-2-4: [-4397-] {+4449+} MiB/s
siphash128-1-3: [-7281-] {+7374+} MiB/s
aegis-128x4 mac: [-73385-] {+74523+} MiB/s
aegis-256x4 mac: [-30160-] {+30539+} MiB/s
aegis-128x2 mac: [-66662-] {+67267+} MiB/s
aegis-256x2 mac: [-16812-] {+16806+} MiB/s
aegis-128l mac: [-33876-] {+34055+} MiB/s
aegis-256 mac: [-8993-] {+9087+} MiB/s
aes-cmac: 2036 MiB/s
x25519: [-20670-] {+16844+} exchanges/s
ed25519: [-29763-] {+29576+} signatures/s
ecdsa-p256: [-4762-] {+4900+} signatures/s
ecdsa-p384: [-1465-] {+1500+} signatures/s
ecdsa-secp256k1: [-5643-] {+5769+} signatures/s
ed25519: [-21926-] {+21721+} verifications/s
ed25519: [-51200-] {+50880+} verifications/s (batch)
chacha20Poly1305: [-1189-] {+1109+} MiB/s
xchacha20Poly1305: [-1196-] {+1107+} MiB/s
xchacha8Poly1305: [-1466-] {+1555+} MiB/s
xsalsa20Poly1305: [-660-] {+620+} MiB/s
aegis-128x4: [-76389-] {+78181+} MiB/s
aegis-128x2: [-53946-] {+53495+} MiB/s
aegis-128l: [-27219-] {+25621+} MiB/s
aegis-256x4: [-49351-] {+49542+} MiB/s
aegis-256x2: [-32390-] {+32366+} MiB/s
aegis-256: [-8881-] {+8944+} MiB/s
aes128-gcm: [-6095-] {+6205+} MiB/s
aes256-gcm: [-5306-] {+5427+} MiB/s
aes128-ocb: [-8529-] {+13974+} MiB/s
aes256-ocb: [-7241-] {+9442+} MiB/s
isapa128a: [-204-] {+214+} MiB/s
aes128-single: [-133857882-] {+134170944+} ops/s
aes256-single: [-96306962-] {+96408639+} ops/s
aes128-8: [-1083210101-] {+1073727253+} ops/s
aes256-8: [-762042466-] {+767091778+} ops/s
bcrypt: 0.009 s/ops
scrypt: [-0.018-] {+0.017+} s/ops
argon2: [-0.037-] {+0.060+} s/ops
kyber512d00: [-206057-] {+205779+} encaps/s
kyber768d00: [-156074-] {+150711+} encaps/s
kyber1024d00: [-116626-] {+115469+} encaps/s
kyber512d00: [-181149-] {+182046+} decaps/s
kyber768d00: [-136965-] {+135676+} decaps/s
kyber1024d00: [-101307-] {+100643+} decaps/s
kyber512d00: [-123624-] {+123375+} keygen/s
kyber768d00: [-69465-] {+70828+} keygen/s
kyber1024d00: [-43117-] {+43208+} keygen/s
|
|
added adapter to AnyWriter and GenericWriter to help bridge the gap
between old and new API
make std.testing.expectFmt work at compile-time
std.fmt no longer has a dependency on std.unicode. Formatted printing
was never properly unicode-aware. Now it no longer pretends to be.
Breakage/deprecations:
* std.fs.File.reader -> std.fs.File.deprecatedReader
* std.fs.File.writer -> std.fs.File.deprecatedWriter
* std.io.GenericReader -> std.io.Reader
* std.io.GenericWriter -> std.io.Writer
* std.io.AnyReader -> std.io.Reader
* std.io.AnyWriter -> std.io.Writer
* std.fmt.format -> std.fmt.deprecatedFormat
* std.fmt.fmtSliceEscapeLower -> std.ascii.hexEscape
* std.fmt.fmtSliceEscapeUpper -> std.ascii.hexEscape
* std.fmt.fmtSliceHexLower -> {x}
* std.fmt.fmtSliceHexUpper -> {X}
* std.fmt.fmtIntSizeDec -> {B}
* std.fmt.fmtIntSizeBin -> {Bi}
* std.fmt.fmtDuration -> {D}
* std.fmt.fmtDurationSigned -> {D}
* {} -> {f} when there is a format method
* format method signature
- anytype -> *std.io.Writer
- inferred error set -> error{WriteFailed}
- options -> (deleted)
* std.fmt.Formatted
- now takes context type explicitly
- no fmt string
|
|
Rename `trimLeft` to `trimStart`, and `trimRight` to `trimEnd`.
`trimLeft` and `trimRight` functions remain as deprecated aliases for
these new names.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Our key pair creation API was ugly and inconsistent between ecdsa
keys and other keys.
The same `generate()` function can now be used to generate key pairs,
and that function cannot fail.
For deterministic keys, a `generateDeterministic()` function is
available for all key types.
Fix comments and compilation of the benchmark by the way.
Fixes #21002
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
By default, programs built in debug mode that open a https connection
will append secrets to the file specified in the SSLKEYLOGFILE
environment variable to allow protocol debugging by external programs.
|
|
|
|
This was preventing TLSv1.2 from working in some cases, because servers
are allowed to send multiple handshake messages in the first handshake
record, whereas this inital loop was assuming that it only contained a
server hello.
|
|
|
|
This is mostly nfc cleanup as I was bisecting the client hello to find
the problematic part, and the only bug fix ended up being
key_share.x25519_kp.public_key ++
key_share.ml_kem768_kp.public_key.toBytes()
to
key_share.ml_kem768_kp.public_key.toBytes() ++
key_share.x25519_kp.public_key)
and the same swap in `KeyShare.exchange` as per some random blog that
says "a hybrid keyshare, constructed by concatenating the public KEM key
with the public X25519 key". I also note that based on the same blog
post, there was a draft version of this method that indeed had these
values swapped, and that used to be supported by this code, but it was
not properly fixed up when this code was updated from the draft spec.
Closes #21747
|
|
|
|
This condition is already checked less restrictively in
`KeyShare.exchange`.
|
|
Note that the removed `error.TlsIllegalParameter` case is still caught
below when it is compared to a fixed-length string, but after checking
the proper protocol version requirement first.
|
|
|
|
X25519MLKEM768 replaces X25519Kyber768Draft00 now that NIST has
released ML-KEM.
IANA has assigned the codepoint 0x11ec:
https://www.iana.org/assignments/tls-parameters/tls-parameters.xhtml#tls-parameters-8
|
|
On decryption tls client should remove zero byte padding after the
content type field. This padding is rarely used, the only site (from the
list of top domains) that I found using it is `tutanota.com`.
From [RFC](https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/rfc8446#section-5.4):
> All encrypted TLS records can be padded.
> Padding is a string of zero-valued bytes appended to the ContentType
field before encryption.
> the receiving implementation scans the field from the end toward the
beginning until it finds a non-zero octet. This non-zero octet is the
content type of the message.
Currently we can't connect to that site:
```
$ zig run main.zig -- tutanota.com
error: TlsInitializationFailed
/usr/local/zig/zig-linux-x86_64-0.14.0-dev.208+854e86c56/lib/std/crypto/tls/Client.zig:476:45: 0x121fbed in init__anon_10331 (http_get_std)
if (inner_ct != .handshake) return error.TlsUnexpectedMessage;
^
/usr/local/zig/zig-linux-x86_64-0.14.0-dev.208+854e86c56/lib/std/http/Client.zig:1357:99: 0x1161f0b in connectTcp (http_get_std)
conn.data.tls_client.* = std.crypto.tls.Client.init(stream, client.ca_bundle, host) catch return error.TlsInitializationFailed;
^
/usr/local/zig/zig-linux-x86_64-0.14.0-dev.208+854e86c56/lib/std/http/Client.zig:1492:14: 0x11271e1 in connect (http_get_std)
} orelse return client.connectTcp(host, port, protocol);
^
/usr/local/zig/zig-linux-x86_64-0.14.0-dev.208+854e86c56/lib/std/http/Client.zig:1640:9: 0x111a24e in open (http_get_std)
try client.connect(valid_uri.host.?.raw, uriPort(valid_uri, protocol), protocol);
^
/home/ianic/Code/tls.zig/example/http_get_std.zig:28:19: 0x1118f8c in main (http_get_std)
var req = try client.open(.GET, uri, .{ .server_header_buffer = &server_header_buffer });
^
```
using this example:
```zig
const std = @import("std");
pub fn main() !void {
var gpa = std.heap.GeneralPurposeAllocator(.{}){};
const allocator = gpa.allocator();
const args = try std.process.argsAlloc(allocator);
defer std.process.argsFree(allocator, args);
if (args.len > 1) {
const domain = args[1];
var client: std.http.Client = .{ .allocator = allocator };
defer client.deinit();
// Add https:// prefix if needed
const url = brk: {
const scheme = "https://";
if (domain.len >= scheme.len and std.mem.eql(u8, domain[0..scheme.len], scheme))
break :brk domain;
var url_buf: [128]u8 = undefined;
break :brk try std.fmt.bufPrint(&url_buf, "https://{s}", .{domain});
};
const uri = try std.Uri.parse(url);
var server_header_buffer: [16 * 1024]u8 = undefined;
var req = try client.open(.GET, uri, .{ .server_header_buffer = &server_header_buffer });
defer req.deinit();
try req.send();
try req.wait();
}
}
```
|
|
When calculating how much ciphertext from the stream can fit into
user and internal buffers we should also take into account ciphertext
data which are already in internal buffer.
Fixes: 15226
Tested with
[this](https://github.com/ziglang/zig/issues/15226#issuecomment-2218809140).
Using client with different read buffers until I, hopefully, understood
what is happening.
Not relevant to this fix, but this
[part](https://github.com/ziglang/zig/blob/95d9292a7a09ed883e65510ec054619747315c48/lib/std/crypto/tls/Client.zig#L988-L991)
is still mystery to me. Why we don't use free_size in buf_cap
calculation. Seems like rudiment from previous implementation without iovec.
|
|
|
|
|
|
closes #5019
|
|
This fixes issues targetting both `x86_64-linux` and `x86_64-macos` with
the self-hosted backend.
|
|
Which were claimed to be supported during the handshake but were not
actually implemented.
|
|
Per last paragraph of RFC 8446, Section 5.2, the length of the inner content of an encrypted record must not exceed 2^14 + 1, while that of the whole encrypted record must not exceed 2^14 + 256.
|
|
Client for tls was using a function that wasn't declared on the
interface for it. The issue wasn't apparent because net stream
implemented that function.
I changed it to keep the interface promise of what's required to be
compatible with the tls client functionality.
|
|
|
|
Following the recommendations from [1], the AEGIS specification
and the TLS registry [2] were updated to recommend SHA512 for the
traffic secrets.
[1] https://eprint.iacr.org/2023/913.pdf
[2] https://www.iana.org/assignments/tls-parameters/tls-parameters.xhtml#tls-parameters-4
|
|
|
|
Let's take this breaking change opportunity to fix the style of this
enum.
|
|
Use inline to vastly simplify the exposed API. This allows a
comptime-known endian parameter to be propogated, making extra functions
for a specific endianness completely unnecessary.
|
|
|
|
This fixes HTTP GET to https://www.iana.org/domains/reserved
for example
|
|
|
|
|
|
Most of this migration was performed automatically with `zig fmt`. There
were a few exceptions which I had to manually fix:
* `@alignCast` and `@addrSpaceCast` cannot be automatically rewritten
* `@truncate`'s fixup is incorrect for vectors
* Test cases are not formatted, and their error locations change
|
|
Signed-off-by: Eric Joldasov <bratishkaerik@getgoogleoff.me>
|