1
0
Fork 0
mirror of https://github.com/warmcat/libwebsockets.git synced 2025-03-09 00:00:04 +01:00
libwebsockets/lib/tls/mbedtls/mbedtls-ssl.c

357 lines
9.1 KiB
C
Raw Permalink Normal View History

/*
* libwebsockets - small server side websockets and web server implementation
*
* Copyright (C) 2010 - 2019 Andy Green <andy@warmcat.com>
*
* Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy
* of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to
* deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the
* rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or
* sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is
* furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
*
* The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in
* all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
*
* THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR
* IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY,
* FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE
* AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER
* LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING
* FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS
* IN THE SOFTWARE.
*/
#include "private-lib-core.h"
#include "private-lib-tls-mbedtls.h"
2020-01-02 08:32:23 +00:00
void
lws_ssl_destroy(struct lws_vhost *vhost)
{
if (!lws_check_opt(vhost->context->options,
LWS_SERVER_OPTION_DO_SSL_GLOBAL_INIT))
return;
if (vhost->tls.ssl_ctx)
SSL_CTX_free(vhost->tls.ssl_ctx);
if (!vhost->tls.user_supplied_ssl_ctx && vhost->tls.ssl_client_ctx)
SSL_CTX_free(vhost->tls.ssl_client_ctx);
if (vhost->tls.x509_client_CA)
X509_free(vhost->tls.x509_client_CA);
}
2020-01-02 08:32:23 +00:00
int
lws_ssl_capable_read(struct lws *wsi, unsigned char *buf, size_t len)
{
fakewsi: replace with smaller substructure Currently we always reserve a fakewsi per pt so events that don't have a related actual wsi, like vhost-protocol-init or vhost cert init via protocol callback can make callbacks that look reasonable to user protocol handler code expecting a valid wsi every time. This patch splits out stuff that user callbacks often unconditionally expect to be in a wsi, like context pointer, vhost pointer etc into a substructure, which is composed into struct lws at the top of it. Internal references (struct lws is opaque, so there are only internal references) are all updated to go via the substructre, the compiler should make that a NOP. Helpers are added when fakewsi is used and referenced. If not PLAT_FREERTOS, we continue to provide a full fakewsi in the pt as before, although the helpers improve consistency by zeroing down the substructure. There is a huge amount of user code out there over the last 10 years that did not always have the minimal examples to follow, some of it does some unexpected things. If it is PLAT_FREERTOS, that is a newer thing in lws and users have the benefit of being able to follow the minimal examples' approach. For PLAT_FREERTOS we don't reserve the fakewsi in the pt any more, saving around 800 bytes. The helpers then create a struct lws_a (the substructure) on the stack, zero it down (but it is only like 4 pointers) and prepare it with whatever we know like the context. Then we cast it to a struct lws * and use it in the user protocol handler call. In this case, the remainder of the struct lws is undefined. However the amount of old protocol handlers that might touch things outside of the substructure in PLAT_FREERTOS is very limited compared to legacy lws user code and the saving is significant on constrained devices. User handlers should not be touching everything in a wsi every time anyway, there are several cases where there is no valid wsi to do the call with. Dereference of things outside the substructure should only happen when the callback reason shows there is a valid wsi bound to the activity (as in all the minimal examples).
2020-07-19 08:33:46 +01:00
struct lws_context *context = wsi->a.context;
struct lws_context_per_thread *pt = &context->pt[(int)wsi->tsi];
int n = 0, m;
if (!wsi->tls.ssl)
return lws_ssl_capable_read_no_ssl(wsi, buf, len);
errno = 0;
n = SSL_read(wsi->tls.ssl, buf, (int)len);
#if defined(LWS_PLAT_FREERTOS)
2018-09-05 14:45:10 +08:00
if (!n && errno == LWS_ENOTCONN) {
lwsl_debug("%s: SSL_read ENOTCONN\n", lws_wsi_tag(wsi));
return LWS_SSL_CAPABLE_ERROR;
}
#endif
lwsl_debug("%s: %s: SSL_read says %d\n", __func__, lws_wsi_tag(wsi), n);
/* manpage: returning 0 means connection shut down */
if (!n) {
wsi->socket_is_permanently_unusable = 1;
return LWS_SSL_CAPABLE_ERROR;
}
if (n < 0) {
m = SSL_get_error(wsi->tls.ssl, n);
lwsl_debug("%s: %s: ssl err %d errno %d\n", __func__, lws_wsi_tag(wsi), m, errno);
if (errno == LWS_ENOTCONN)
/* If the socket isn't connected anymore, bail out. */
goto do_err1;
2021-05-17 10:40:34 +01:00
#if defined(LWS_PLAT_FREERTOS)
if (errno == LWS_ECONNABORTED)
goto do_err1;
#endif
if (m == SSL_ERROR_ZERO_RETURN ||
m == SSL_ERROR_SYSCALL)
goto do_err;
if (m == SSL_ERROR_WANT_READ || SSL_want_read(wsi->tls.ssl)) {
lwsl_debug("%s: WANT_READ\n", __func__);
lwsl_debug("%s: LWS_SSL_CAPABLE_MORE_SERVICE\n", lws_wsi_tag(wsi));
return LWS_SSL_CAPABLE_MORE_SERVICE;
}
if (m == SSL_ERROR_WANT_WRITE || SSL_want_write(wsi->tls.ssl)) {
lwsl_info("%s: WANT_WRITE\n", __func__);
lwsl_debug("%s: LWS_SSL_CAPABLE_MORE_SERVICE\n", lws_wsi_tag(wsi));
wsi->tls_read_wanted_write = 1;
lws_callback_on_writable(wsi);
return LWS_SSL_CAPABLE_MORE_SERVICE;
}
do_err1:
wsi->socket_is_permanently_unusable = 1;
do_err:
#if defined(LWS_WITH_SYS_METRICS)
if (wsi->a.vhost)
lws_metric_event(wsi->a.vhost->mt_traffic_rx, METRES_NOGO, 0);
#endif
return LWS_SSL_CAPABLE_ERROR;
}
2021-01-23 20:56:01 +00:00
#if defined(LWS_TLS_LOG_PLAINTEXT_RX)
/*
* If using mbedtls type tls library, this is the earliest point for all
* paths to dump what was received as decrypted data from the tls tunnel
*/
lwsl_notice("%s: len %d\n", __func__, n);
2021-06-16 07:08:50 +01:00
lwsl_hexdump_notice(buf, (size_t)n);
#endif
#if defined(LWS_WITH_SYS_METRICS)
fakewsi: replace with smaller substructure Currently we always reserve a fakewsi per pt so events that don't have a related actual wsi, like vhost-protocol-init or vhost cert init via protocol callback can make callbacks that look reasonable to user protocol handler code expecting a valid wsi every time. This patch splits out stuff that user callbacks often unconditionally expect to be in a wsi, like context pointer, vhost pointer etc into a substructure, which is composed into struct lws at the top of it. Internal references (struct lws is opaque, so there are only internal references) are all updated to go via the substructre, the compiler should make that a NOP. Helpers are added when fakewsi is used and referenced. If not PLAT_FREERTOS, we continue to provide a full fakewsi in the pt as before, although the helpers improve consistency by zeroing down the substructure. There is a huge amount of user code out there over the last 10 years that did not always have the minimal examples to follow, some of it does some unexpected things. If it is PLAT_FREERTOS, that is a newer thing in lws and users have the benefit of being able to follow the minimal examples' approach. For PLAT_FREERTOS we don't reserve the fakewsi in the pt any more, saving around 800 bytes. The helpers then create a struct lws_a (the substructure) on the stack, zero it down (but it is only like 4 pointers) and prepare it with whatever we know like the context. Then we cast it to a struct lws * and use it in the user protocol handler call. In this case, the remainder of the struct lws is undefined. However the amount of old protocol handlers that might touch things outside of the substructure in PLAT_FREERTOS is very limited compared to legacy lws user code and the saving is significant on constrained devices. User handlers should not be touching everything in a wsi every time anyway, there are several cases where there is no valid wsi to do the call with. Dereference of things outside the substructure should only happen when the callback reason shows there is a valid wsi bound to the activity (as in all the minimal examples).
2020-07-19 08:33:46 +01:00
if (wsi->a.vhost)
lws_metric_event(wsi->a.vhost->mt_traffic_rx,
METRES_GO /* rx */, (u_mt_t)n);
#endif
/*
* if it was our buffer that limited what we read,
* check if SSL has additional data pending inside SSL buffers.
*
* Because these won't signal at the network layer with POLLIN
* and if we don't realize, this data will sit there forever
*/
if (n != (int)len)
goto bail;
if (!wsi->tls.ssl)
goto bail;
if (SSL_pending(wsi->tls.ssl)) {
if (lws_dll2_is_detached(&wsi->tls.dll_pending_tls))
lws_dll2_add_head(&wsi->tls.dll_pending_tls,
&pt->tls.dll_pending_tls_owner);
} else
__lws_ssl_remove_wsi_from_buffered_list(wsi);
return n;
bail:
lws_ssl_remove_wsi_from_buffered_list(wsi);
return n;
}
2020-01-02 08:32:23 +00:00
int
lws_ssl_pending(struct lws *wsi)
{
if (!wsi->tls.ssl)
return 0;
return SSL_pending(wsi->tls.ssl);
}
2020-01-02 08:32:23 +00:00
int
lws_ssl_capable_write(struct lws *wsi, unsigned char *buf, size_t len)
{
int n, m;
2021-01-23 20:56:01 +00:00
#if defined(LWS_TLS_LOG_PLAINTEXT_TX)
/*
* If using mbedtls type tls library, this is the last point for all
* paths before sending data into the tls tunnel, where you can dump it
* and see what is being sent.
*/
lwsl_notice("%s: len %d\n", __func__, (int)len);
lwsl_hexdump_notice(buf, len);
#endif
if (!wsi->tls.ssl)
return lws_ssl_capable_write_no_ssl(wsi, buf, len);
n = SSL_write(wsi->tls.ssl, buf, (int)len);
if (n > 0) {
#if defined(LWS_WITH_SYS_METRICS)
if (wsi->a.vhost)
lws_metric_event(wsi->a.vhost->mt_traffic_tx,
METRES_GO, (u_mt_t)n);
#endif
return n;
}
m = SSL_get_error(wsi->tls.ssl, n);
if (m != SSL_ERROR_SYSCALL) {
if (m == SSL_ERROR_WANT_READ || SSL_want_read(wsi->tls.ssl)) {
lwsl_notice("%s: want read\n", __func__);
return LWS_SSL_CAPABLE_MORE_SERVICE;
}
if (m == SSL_ERROR_WANT_WRITE || SSL_want_write(wsi->tls.ssl)) {
lws_set_blocking_send(wsi);
http: compression methods Add generic http compression layer eanbled at cmake with LWS_WITH_HTTP_STREAM_COMPRESSION. This is wholly a feature of the HTTP role (used by h1 and h2 roles) and doesn't exist outside that context. Currently provides 'deflate' and 'br' compression methods for server side only. 'br' requires also -DLWS_WITH_HTTP_BROTLI=1 at cmake and the brotli libraries (available in your distro already) and dev package. Other compression methods can be added nicely using an ops struct. The built-in file serving stuff will use this is the client says he can handle it, and the mimetype of the file either starts with "text/" (html and css etc) or is the mimetype of Javascript. zlib allocates quite a bit while in use, it seems to be around 256KiB per stream. So this is only useful on relatively strong servers with lots of memory. However for some usecases where you are serving a lot of css and js assets, it's a nice help. The patch performs special treatment for http/1.1 pipelining, since the compression is performed on the fly the compressed content-length is not known until the end. So for h1 only, chunked transfer-encoding is automatically added so pipelining can continue of the connection. For h2 the chunking is neither supported nor required, so it "just works". User code can also request to add a compression transform before the reply headers were sent using the new api LWS_VISIBLE int lws_http_compression_apply(struct lws *wsi, const char *name, unsigned char **p, unsigned char *end, char decomp); ... this allows transparent compression of dynamically generated HTTP. The requested compression (eg, "deflate") is only applied if the client headers indicated it was supported, otherwise it's a NOP. Name may be NULL in which case the first compression method in the internal table at stream.c that is mentioned as acceptable by the client will be used. NOTE: the compression translation, same as h2 support, relies on the user code using LWS_WRITE_HTTP and then LWS_WRITE_HTTP_FINAL on the last part written. The internal lws fileserving code already does this.
2018-09-02 14:43:05 +08:00
lwsl_debug("%s: want write\n", __func__);
return LWS_SSL_CAPABLE_MORE_SERVICE;
}
}
lwsl_debug("%s failed: %d\n",__func__, m);
wsi->socket_is_permanently_unusable = 1;
#if defined(LWS_WITH_SYS_METRICS)
if (wsi->a.vhost)
lws_metric_event(wsi->a.vhost->mt_traffic_tx,
METRES_NOGO, (u_mt_t)n);
#endif
return LWS_SSL_CAPABLE_ERROR;
}
int openssl_SSL_CTX_private_data_index;
void
lws_ssl_info_callback(const SSL *ssl, int where, int ret)
{
struct lws *wsi;
struct lws_context *context;
struct lws_ssl_info si;
context = (struct lws_context *)SSL_CTX_get_ex_data(
SSL_get_SSL_CTX(ssl),
openssl_SSL_CTX_private_data_index);
if (!context)
return;
wsi = wsi_from_fd(context, SSL_get_fd(ssl));
if (!wsi)
return;
fakewsi: replace with smaller substructure Currently we always reserve a fakewsi per pt so events that don't have a related actual wsi, like vhost-protocol-init or vhost cert init via protocol callback can make callbacks that look reasonable to user protocol handler code expecting a valid wsi every time. This patch splits out stuff that user callbacks often unconditionally expect to be in a wsi, like context pointer, vhost pointer etc into a substructure, which is composed into struct lws at the top of it. Internal references (struct lws is opaque, so there are only internal references) are all updated to go via the substructre, the compiler should make that a NOP. Helpers are added when fakewsi is used and referenced. If not PLAT_FREERTOS, we continue to provide a full fakewsi in the pt as before, although the helpers improve consistency by zeroing down the substructure. There is a huge amount of user code out there over the last 10 years that did not always have the minimal examples to follow, some of it does some unexpected things. If it is PLAT_FREERTOS, that is a newer thing in lws and users have the benefit of being able to follow the minimal examples' approach. For PLAT_FREERTOS we don't reserve the fakewsi in the pt any more, saving around 800 bytes. The helpers then create a struct lws_a (the substructure) on the stack, zero it down (but it is only like 4 pointers) and prepare it with whatever we know like the context. Then we cast it to a struct lws * and use it in the user protocol handler call. In this case, the remainder of the struct lws is undefined. However the amount of old protocol handlers that might touch things outside of the substructure in PLAT_FREERTOS is very limited compared to legacy lws user code and the saving is significant on constrained devices. User handlers should not be touching everything in a wsi every time anyway, there are several cases where there is no valid wsi to do the call with. Dereference of things outside the substructure should only happen when the callback reason shows there is a valid wsi bound to the activity (as in all the minimal examples).
2020-07-19 08:33:46 +01:00
if (!(where & wsi->a.vhost->tls.ssl_info_event_mask))
return;
si.where = where;
si.ret = ret;
fakewsi: replace with smaller substructure Currently we always reserve a fakewsi per pt so events that don't have a related actual wsi, like vhost-protocol-init or vhost cert init via protocol callback can make callbacks that look reasonable to user protocol handler code expecting a valid wsi every time. This patch splits out stuff that user callbacks often unconditionally expect to be in a wsi, like context pointer, vhost pointer etc into a substructure, which is composed into struct lws at the top of it. Internal references (struct lws is opaque, so there are only internal references) are all updated to go via the substructre, the compiler should make that a NOP. Helpers are added when fakewsi is used and referenced. If not PLAT_FREERTOS, we continue to provide a full fakewsi in the pt as before, although the helpers improve consistency by zeroing down the substructure. There is a huge amount of user code out there over the last 10 years that did not always have the minimal examples to follow, some of it does some unexpected things. If it is PLAT_FREERTOS, that is a newer thing in lws and users have the benefit of being able to follow the minimal examples' approach. For PLAT_FREERTOS we don't reserve the fakewsi in the pt any more, saving around 800 bytes. The helpers then create a struct lws_a (the substructure) on the stack, zero it down (but it is only like 4 pointers) and prepare it with whatever we know like the context. Then we cast it to a struct lws * and use it in the user protocol handler call. In this case, the remainder of the struct lws is undefined. However the amount of old protocol handlers that might touch things outside of the substructure in PLAT_FREERTOS is very limited compared to legacy lws user code and the saving is significant on constrained devices. User handlers should not be touching everything in a wsi every time anyway, there are several cases where there is no valid wsi to do the call with. Dereference of things outside the substructure should only happen when the callback reason shows there is a valid wsi bound to the activity (as in all the minimal examples).
2020-07-19 08:33:46 +01:00
if (user_callback_handle_rxflow(wsi->a.protocol->callback,
wsi, LWS_CALLBACK_SSL_INFO,
wsi->user_space, &si, 0))
lws_set_timeout(wsi, PENDING_TIMEOUT_KILLED_BY_SSL_INFO, -1);
}
2020-01-02 08:32:23 +00:00
int
lws_ssl_close(struct lws *wsi)
{
lws_sockfd_type n;
if (!wsi->tls.ssl)
return 0; /* not handled */
#if defined (LWS_HAVE_SSL_SET_INFO_CALLBACK)
/* kill ssl callbacks, becausse we will remove the fd from the
* table linking it to the wsi
*/
fakewsi: replace with smaller substructure Currently we always reserve a fakewsi per pt so events that don't have a related actual wsi, like vhost-protocol-init or vhost cert init via protocol callback can make callbacks that look reasonable to user protocol handler code expecting a valid wsi every time. This patch splits out stuff that user callbacks often unconditionally expect to be in a wsi, like context pointer, vhost pointer etc into a substructure, which is composed into struct lws at the top of it. Internal references (struct lws is opaque, so there are only internal references) are all updated to go via the substructre, the compiler should make that a NOP. Helpers are added when fakewsi is used and referenced. If not PLAT_FREERTOS, we continue to provide a full fakewsi in the pt as before, although the helpers improve consistency by zeroing down the substructure. There is a huge amount of user code out there over the last 10 years that did not always have the minimal examples to follow, some of it does some unexpected things. If it is PLAT_FREERTOS, that is a newer thing in lws and users have the benefit of being able to follow the minimal examples' approach. For PLAT_FREERTOS we don't reserve the fakewsi in the pt any more, saving around 800 bytes. The helpers then create a struct lws_a (the substructure) on the stack, zero it down (but it is only like 4 pointers) and prepare it with whatever we know like the context. Then we cast it to a struct lws * and use it in the user protocol handler call. In this case, the remainder of the struct lws is undefined. However the amount of old protocol handlers that might touch things outside of the substructure in PLAT_FREERTOS is very limited compared to legacy lws user code and the saving is significant on constrained devices. User handlers should not be touching everything in a wsi every time anyway, there are several cases where there is no valid wsi to do the call with. Dereference of things outside the substructure should only happen when the callback reason shows there is a valid wsi bound to the activity (as in all the minimal examples).
2020-07-19 08:33:46 +01:00
if (wsi->a.vhost->tls.ssl_info_event_mask)
SSL_set_info_callback(wsi->tls.ssl, NULL);
#endif
#if defined(LWS_TLS_SYNTHESIZE_CB)
lws_sul_cancel(&wsi->tls.sul_cb_synth);
/*
* ... check the session in case it did not live long enough to get
* the scheduled callback to sample it
*/
lws_sess_cache_synth_cb(&wsi->tls.sul_cb_synth);
#endif
n = SSL_get_fd(wsi->tls.ssl);
if (!wsi->socket_is_permanently_unusable)
SSL_shutdown(wsi->tls.ssl);
compatible_close(n);
SSL_free(wsi->tls.ssl);
wsi->tls.ssl = NULL;
lws_tls_restrict_return(wsi);
return 1; /* handled */
}
void
lws_ssl_SSL_CTX_destroy(struct lws_vhost *vhost)
{
if (vhost->tls.ssl_ctx)
SSL_CTX_free(vhost->tls.ssl_ctx);
if (!vhost->tls.user_supplied_ssl_ctx && vhost->tls.ssl_client_ctx)
SSL_CTX_free(vhost->tls.ssl_client_ctx);
#if defined(LWS_WITH_ACME)
2017-10-28 11:33:34 +08:00
lws_tls_acme_sni_cert_destroy(vhost);
#endif
}
void
lws_ssl_context_destroy(struct lws_context *context)
{
}
lws_tls_ctx *
lws_tls_ctx_from_wsi(struct lws *wsi)
{
if (!wsi->tls.ssl)
return NULL;
return SSL_get_SSL_CTX(wsi->tls.ssl);
}
enum lws_ssl_capable_status
2018-03-11 11:26:06 +08:00
__lws_tls_shutdown(struct lws *wsi)
{
int n = SSL_shutdown(wsi->tls.ssl);
lwsl_debug("SSL_shutdown=%d for fd %d\n", n, wsi->desc.sockfd);
switch (n) {
case 1: /* successful completion */
(void)shutdown(wsi->desc.sockfd, SHUT_WR);
return LWS_SSL_CAPABLE_DONE;
case 0: /* needs a retry */
2018-03-11 11:26:06 +08:00
__lws_change_pollfd(wsi, 0, LWS_POLLIN);
return LWS_SSL_CAPABLE_MORE_SERVICE;
default: /* fatal error, or WANT */
n = SSL_get_error(wsi->tls.ssl, n);
if (n != SSL_ERROR_SYSCALL && n != SSL_ERROR_SSL) {
if (SSL_want_read(wsi->tls.ssl)) {
lwsl_debug("(wants read)\n");
2018-03-11 11:26:06 +08:00
__lws_change_pollfd(wsi, 0, LWS_POLLIN);
return LWS_SSL_CAPABLE_MORE_SERVICE_READ;
}
if (SSL_want_write(wsi->tls.ssl)) {
lwsl_debug("(wants write)\n");
2018-03-11 11:26:06 +08:00
__lws_change_pollfd(wsi, 0, LWS_POLLOUT);
return LWS_SSL_CAPABLE_MORE_SERVICE_WRITE;
}
}
return LWS_SSL_CAPABLE_ERROR;
}
}
static int
tops_fake_POLLIN_for_buffered_mbedtls(struct lws_context_per_thread *pt)
{
return lws_tls_fake_POLLIN_for_buffered(pt);
}
const struct lws_tls_ops tls_ops_mbedtls = {
/* fake_POLLIN_for_buffered */ tops_fake_POLLIN_for_buffered_mbedtls,
};