Commit Graph

18 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
moneromooo-monero
9a7a453f25
net_ssl: free certs after setting them up 2019-05-10 00:16:49 +00:00
moneromooo-monero
a62e072571
net_ssl: SSL config tweaks for compatibility and security
add two RSA based ciphers for Windows/depends compatibility
also enforce server cipher ordering
also set ECDH to auto because vtnerd says it is good :)

When built with the depends system, openssl does not include any
cipher on the current whitelist, so add this one, which fixes the
problem, and does seem sensible.
2019-05-07 10:01:42 +00:00
moneromooo-monero
5e0da6fb68
change SSL certificate fingerprint whitelisting from SHA1 to SHA-256
SHA1 is too close to bruteforceable
2019-04-26 11:37:15 +00:00
Lee Clagett
2e578b8214 Enabling daemon-rpc SSL now requires non-system CA verification
If `--daemon-ssl enabled` is set in the wallet, then a user certificate,
fingerprint, or onion/i2p address must be provided.
2019-04-07 13:02:43 -04:00
Lee Clagett
d58f368289 Require manual override for user chain certificates.
An override for the wallet to daemon connection is provided, but not for
other SSL contexts. The intent is to prevent users from supplying a
system CA as the "user" whitelisted certificate, which is less secure
since the key is controlled by a third party.
2019-04-07 00:44:37 -04:00
Lee Clagett
97cd1fa98d Only check top-level certificate against fingerprint list.
This allows "chain" certificates to be used with the fingerprint
whitelist option. A user can get a system-ca signature as backup while
clients explicitly whitelist the server certificate. The user specified
CA can also be combined with fingerprint whitelisting.
2019-04-07 00:44:37 -04:00
Lee Clagett
7c388fb358 Call use_certificate_chain_file instead of use_certificate_file
The former has the same behavior with single self signed certificates
while allowing the server to have separate short-term authentication
keys with long-term authorization keys.
2019-04-07 00:44:37 -04:00
Lee Clagett
eca0fea45a Perform RFC 2818 hostname verification in client SSL handshakes
If the verification mode is `system_ca`, clients will now do hostname
verification. Thus, only certificates from expected hostnames are
allowed when SSL is enabled. This can be overridden by forcible setting
the SSL mode to autodetect.

Clients will also send the hostname even when `system_ca` is not being
performed. This leaks possible metadata, but allows servers providing
multiple hostnames to respond with the correct certificate. One example
is cloudflare, which getmonero.org is currently using.
2019-04-07 00:44:37 -04:00
Lee Clagett
0416764cae Require server verification when SSL is enabled.
If SSL is "enabled" via command line without specifying a fingerprint or
certificate, the system CA list is checked for server verification and
_now_ fails the handshake if that check fails. This change was made to
remain consistent with standard SSL/TLS client behavior. This can still
be overridden by using the allow any certificate flag.

If the SSL behavior is autodetect, the system CA list is still checked
but a warning is logged if this fails. The stream is not rejected
because a re-connect will be attempted - its better to have an
unverified encrypted stream than an unverified + unencrypted stream.
2019-04-07 00:44:37 -04:00
Lee Clagett
96d602ac84 Add verify_fail_if_no_cert option for proper client authentication
Using `verify_peer` on server side requests a certificate from the
client. If no certificate is provided, the server silently accepts the
connection and rejects if the client sends an unexpected certificate.
Adding `verify_fail_if_no_cert` has no affect on client and for server
requires that the peer sends a certificate or fails the handshake. This
is the desired behavior when the user specifies a fingerprint or CA file.
2019-04-07 00:44:37 -04:00
Lee Clagett
21eb1b0725 Pass SSL arguments via one class and use shared_ptr instead of reference 2019-04-07 00:44:37 -04:00
Lee Clagett
f18a069fcc Do not require client certificate unless server has some whitelisted.
Currently a client must provide a certificate, even if the server is
configured to allow all certificates. This drops that requirement from
the client - unless the server is configured to use a CA file or
fingerprint(s) for verification - which is the standard behavior for SSL
servers.

The "system-wide" CA is not being used as a "fallback" to verify clients
before or after this patch.
2019-04-06 23:47:06 -04:00
Lee Clagett
a3b0284837 Change SSL certificate file list to OpenSSL builtin load_verify_location
Specifying SSL certificates for peer verification does an exact match,
making it a not-so-obvious alias for the fingerprints option. This
changes the checks to OpenSSL which loads concatenated certificate(s)
from a single file and does a certificate-authority (chain of trust)
check instead. There is no drop in security - a compromised exact match
fingerprint has the same worse case failure. There is increased security
in allowing separate long-term CA key and short-term SSL server keys.

This also removes loading of the system-default CA files if a custom
CA file or certificate fingerprint is specified.
2019-04-06 23:47:06 -04:00
Martijn Otto
dffdccdc9e
No longer use deprecated RSA_generate_key in favor of
RSA_generate_key_ex
2019-03-27 13:23:30 +01:00
Dusan Klinec
bb8eab24da
epee: certificate generation fix, pkey deleted
- pkey gets deleted by the pkey_deleter but the caller tries to serialize it which causes errors as the memory is freed
2019-03-10 20:09:51 +01:00
Howard Chu
b8c2e21cba
Fix startup errors with SSL cert generation
Use SSL API directly, skip boost layer
2019-03-08 15:15:24 +00:00
Martijn Otto
057c279cb4
epee: add SSL support
RPC connections now have optional tranparent SSL.

An optional private key and certificate file can be passed,
using the --{rpc,daemon}-ssl-private-key and
--{rpc,daemon}-ssl-certificate options. Those have as
argument a path to a PEM format private private key and
certificate, respectively.
If not given, a temporary self signed certificate will be used.

SSL can be enabled or disabled using --{rpc}-ssl, which
accepts autodetect (default), disabled or enabled.

Access can be restricted to particular certificates using the
--rpc-ssl-allowed-certificates, which takes a list of
paths to PEM encoded certificates. This can allow a wallet to
connect to only the daemon they think they're connected to,
by forcing SSL and listing the paths to the known good
certificates.

To generate long term certificates:

openssl genrsa -out /tmp/KEY 4096
openssl req -new -key /tmp/KEY -out /tmp/REQ
openssl x509 -req -days 999999 -sha256 -in /tmp/REQ -signkey /tmp/KEY -out /tmp/CERT

/tmp/KEY is the private key, and /tmp/CERT is the certificate,
both in PEM format. /tmp/REQ can be removed. Adjust the last
command to set expiration date, etc, as needed. It doesn't
make a whole lot of sense for monero anyway, since most servers
will run with one time temporary self signed certificates anyway.

SSL support is transparent, so all communication is done on the
existing ports, with SSL autodetection. This means you can start
using an SSL daemon now, but you should not enforce SSL yet or
nothing will talk to you.
2019-03-05 14:16:08 +01:00
moneromooo-monero
2456945408
epee: add SSL support
RPC connections now have optional tranparent SSL.

An optional private key and certificate file can be passed,
using the --{rpc,daemon}-ssl-private-key and
--{rpc,daemon}-ssl-certificate options. Those have as
argument a path to a PEM format private private key and
certificate, respectively.
If not given, a temporary self signed certificate will be used.

SSL can be enabled or disabled using --{rpc}-ssl, which
accepts autodetect (default), disabled or enabled.

Access can be restricted to particular certificates using the
--rpc-ssl-allowed-certificates, which takes a list of
paths to PEM encoded certificates. This can allow a wallet to
connect to only the daemon they think they're connected to,
by forcing SSL and listing the paths to the known good
certificates.

To generate long term certificates:

openssl genrsa -out /tmp/KEY 4096
openssl req -new -key /tmp/KEY -out /tmp/REQ
openssl x509 -req -days 999999 -sha256 -in /tmp/REQ -signkey /tmp/KEY -out /tmp/CERT

/tmp/KEY is the private key, and /tmp/CERT is the certificate,
both in PEM format. /tmp/REQ can be removed. Adjust the last
command to set expiration date, etc, as needed. It doesn't
make a whole lot of sense for monero anyway, since most servers
will run with one time temporary self signed certificates anyway.

SSL support is transparent, so all communication is done on the
existing ports, with SSL autodetection. This means you can start
using an SSL daemon now, but you should not enforce SSL yet or
nothing will talk to you.
2019-02-02 20:05:33 +00:00