This PR adds a new helper function that is run just prior to determine_optimal_proto() and that determines the what information tls_sockets() should include in a ClientHello.
For a TLSv1.3 ClientHello, determine_optimal_sockets_params() determines whether tls_sockets() should use 0x33 or 0x28 are the extension number for the key_share extension. 0x33 should be used with servers that support RFC 8446 or drafts 23-28. 0x28 should be used with servers that support drafts 18-22.
For a TLSv1.2 ClientHello, determine_optimal_sockets_params() determines what cipher list tls_sockets() should send. For most servers, the list of ciphers in $TLS12_CIPHER works best. But, there are some servers that do not support any ciphers in $TLS12_CIPHER, but do support one or more ciphers in $TLS12_CIPHER_2ND_TRY.
This PR fixes a few issues with run_protocol():
* In the case that the call to `tls_sockets "03" "$TLS12_CIPHER"` had a return value of 2, the code determining what results to print was looking at `$DETECTED_TLS_VERSION`. However, the value of this variable was set by the later call to `tls_sockets "04" "$tls13_ciphers_to_test"`. This caused incorrect results in the case of a server that supports TLSv1.3 and TLS1.1 (or earlier), but not TLSv1.2. This PR saves the value of `$DETECTED_TLS_VERSION` in `$tls12_detected_version` and then uses this variable later rather than `$DETECTED_TLS_VERSION`.
* When running in debug mode with a server that does not support TLSv1.3, testssl.sh was printing
TLS 1.3 -- downgradednot offered and downgraded to a weaker protocol"
This PR fixes the output by not printing the "--downgraded"
* As noted in #1329, run_protocols() was treating a downgrade from TLSv1.2 as less bad if the server supports TLSv1.3. This PR changes this code back to treat any downgrade from TLSv1.2 as equally bad.
* In order to be consistent with the TLSv1.3 test, this PR changes the TLS1.2 test output to say "not offered and downgraded to a weaker protocol" if a TLSv1.2 ClientHello results in a downgraded connection.
This PR fixes a problem in run_protocols() that was introduced by 7ec3c6ab99.
7ec3c6ab99 changes run_protocols() to perform the initial testing for TLSv1.3 support before testing for TLSv1.2 support. The problem with this is that the code for testing TLSv1.3 makes use of the results of the TLSv1.2 testing.
In the current code, Line 5183 looks at the value of $subret to determine whether the TLSv1.2 ClientHello resulted in a successful connection. However, $subet has not yet been set (it has just been initialized to 0 at the beginning of the function). Since $subret will always be 0, the code will try to extract a cipher from $TEMPDIR/$NODEIP.parse_tls_serverhello.txt. This may work, since $TEMPDIR/$NODEIP.parse_tls_serverhello.txt may have been populated by a prior function call, but this is not how the code was intended to work.
This PR fixes the problem by doing the TLSv1.2 testing before the TLSv1.3 testing is done. It still waits until both have been tested, however, before outputting the results, so that the output for TLSv1.2 can be modified depending on whether TLSv1.3 is supported.
In order to not repeatedly call check_resolver_bins() the function
was moved to top level. As each check in check_resolver_bins now
is only executed once, it should also work faster. Each get_*_record()
now uses HAS_ variables only.
Also check_resolver_bins() contain now the check whether
idn/idn2 support is available.
Then the IDN URI conversion snipplet was moved to the final function
parse_hn_port() which does operations in the URI supplied.
This PR adds a few quotes to some arguments which when previous code
was executed properly weren't needed.
Also it improves the IDN code from @teward, so that when idn2 is
available, a conversion will be tried, and when idn is available
and/or idn2 failed, a conversion will be tried.
Finally it'll be tried to continue without conversion, hoping that
the DNS client binaries can cope with the IDN URI.
This is not good enough yet and needs to be complemented, see discussion
@ #1321.
The Finding of other_headers such as "Referrer-Policy" during file output are displayed as `$header: $HEADERVALUE` instead of only `$HEADERVALUE` as the good_headers. This leads to duplicate information e.g. in the JSON output file.
... and thus this commit addresses #916.
It does that via a (quite) pre-test which checks for a general availabilty
of TLS 1.3 before the TLS 1.2 protocol test is being run and decides
based on that how a missing TLS 1.2 will be echoed.
Later on the complete TLS 1.3 test will be continued using the results
from the TLS 1.3 pre-test.
This commit addresses #1251 and gives a slight warning when still
using those protocols as government standards are or are at least
to expect also to deprecate those protocols. PCI DSS requires not
to use TLS 1.0 anymore and browser vendors supposedly will deprecate
TLS 1.0/1.1 next year.
This is a WIP for testing. It was committed already in May
(22ad490ea7b2868a4fd45862ca0bf8a3d8f24ea6) but somehow it was
lost.
Comments would be appeciated.
Open:
- how to treat non-HTTP protocols
- TLS 1.3 only hosts will mark the absence of TLS 1.2 as
a medium finding
In cases where TLS 1.3 is the only protocol supported by the server (as e.g.
in #1312), testssl.sh has some limits with the supplied binary.
For now (3.0) there's no perfect technical solution. This PR however improves
the verbosity what's going on and recommends to use an openssl binary
supporting TLS 1.3. And if the "secret" variable OSSL_SHORTCUT is set to true,
it automatically chooses that if available (it's a hack to do so and not
recommended. I just did it as a PoC).
In the next development we should consider probing this upfront!
Furthermore this PR removes some unnecessary quotes in double square brackets.
This commit proactively tries to address cases where the server side
adds Null Bytes after or during ClientHello in cases where it should be text only.
Now VAR2=$(< $VAR1) is being replaced by VAR2=$(cat -v $VAR1) which is normally
not best practice and also considered a useless use of "cat", see
https://web.archive.org/web/20160711205930/http://porkmail.org/era/unix/award.html#uucaletter.
Especially with bash 3.2 (Mac OS X) AND when on the server side binary chars it
was reported to not work ok, see #1292.
Performance measurements showed no to barely measureable penalty (at max 1s displayed difference
in 9 tries).
Travis updated the container images so that the perl
reference to 5.18 was outdated. We use now 5.26 which
works, however we should consider to be more flexible.
JSON::Validator didn't compile in the container. Thus
we switched to just use 'JSON'. That also supports JSON
pretty. For the future we should just test for valid JSON
in all unit test files as it is more effective.
For some reason CVE-2009-3555 ended up in Secure Renegotiation,
whereas CVE-2009-3555 is in fact the Insecure Client-Side Renegotiation
vulnerability with the MiTM problem <= OpenSSl 0.9.8k.
This fixes that (see also #1086 and #933, #907) by removing the CVE #
from the output. Also tyhe output was changed for Secure Renegotiation
into supported/not vulnerable vs. Not supported / VULNERABLE
Some comments were added.
As noted in #1249 STARTTLS with sockets doesn't
work.
This commit fixes that by correcting the STARTTLS
handshake for postgresql. It has to be send via
sockets instead of echo. The server side then will
respond with "S" when STARTTLS is supported. For this
starttls_io() was slightly modified so that also
an input (from the server perspective) is not necessary.
It's fast too
As noted in #1288 with some terminal settings under Linux there
appeared some ~garbage on the screen.
This fixes that by partly reverting 695d02157a2c452598fedbc24ae69809a067592f .
At least now and under an older OpenBSD like 6.2 this doesn't seem
to be necessary.
CERT_COMPRESSION was declared always with fast in ... so that the variable
was always false. This PR fixes that. In addition a informational line
that the new TLS extension has been added (if $DEBUG >3).
Also determine_optimal_proto() is not being run if devel mode
($do_tls_sockets) is enabled.
Furthermore as David added HAS_ZLIB as a global run_crime() now makes
use of it too.
This PR addresses #316 and #1280: it implements server name indication
also for STARTTLS which has been supported by a number of server
implemantations, in the meantime.
Also it does a final polish to David's pwnedkeys PR #1274 a while back:
UI improvement and detection of network problems.
In addition to PR #1279 it introduces a env variable to devel
mode so that "CERT_COMPRESSION=true ./testssl.sh --devel <params> <target>"
can be used to explore certificate compression on a host.
draft-ietf-tls-certificate-compression specifies a new TLS extension that allows a client to indicate support for receiving the server's certificates in compressed form. This PR adds initial support for that extension to testssl.sh. It was developed based on an announcement that facebook.com has implemented support for the extension.
This PR does not add a test for a server's support for the new extension, it just adds code to parse_tls_serverhello() that will parse a compressed certificate message if one is present in the server's response. So, in practice, the code in this PR will not actually be used until additional code has been added that sends a ClientHello with the compress_certificate extension.
The code in this PR can be tested by using the --devel option and by changing line 19347 from
tls_sockets "$TLS_LOW_BYTE" "$HEX_CIPHER" "ephemeralkey"
to
tls_sockets "$TLS_LOW_BYTE" "$HEX_CIPHER" "all+" "00,1b, 00,03, 02, 00,01"
testssl.sh can then be called using
testssl.sh --debug 3 --devel 04 "13,01" facebook.com
Note that this PR adds a test for zlib support to find_openssl_binary(). The test uses $OPENSSL zlib in the same way it is used in parse_tls_serverhello(). The test asks $OPENSSL zlib to uncompress the compressed version of the string "zlib" and the checks to see whether the decompression was performed correctly. There is already a test for zlib support in run_crime(), but I did not check to see whether the check in run_crime() could be replaced with a check of the new $HAS_ZLIB variable.
A couple of checks required sockets but e.g. LDAP via STARTTLS
throwed an error (FIXME: LDAP+STARTTLS over sockets not supported yet)
in fd_sockets().
This adds a temporary workaround so that those functions are bypassed
and LDAP via STARTTLS can be used again.
See also #1258
... which led to a false output in OpenSSL based handshake simulations.
secp256r1 is prime256v1
secp192r1 is prime192v1
Also a few varaiables were added in debug output (environment.txt)
This PR changes run_protocols() so that, when using tls_sockets(), support for TLSv1.3 is only marked as pr_svrty_best() if the final (RFC 8446) version is supported. It also changed run_protocols() so that support for TLSv1.3 is marked as pr_svrty_best() if OpenSSL is used (i.e., if the --ssl-native option is specified).
One potential issue is that the --ssl-native version assumes that if OpenSSL supports TLSv1.3 it supports the final (RFC 8446) version of the protocol. If the tester is using a development version of OpenSSL 1.1.1 rather than the final version, then the protocol test will actually be indicating whether the server supports the same draft version of OpenSSL as the $OPENSSL being used to perform the tests.
Currently the -outfile, -oa, -outFile, and -oA assume that <fname> being provided is to be used as a filename, unless it is "auto." However, all of the individual options (e.g., --logfile) allow for a directory name to be provided instead of a file name.
This PR changes the handling of the -outfile, -oa, -outFile, and -oA options so that if a directory name is provided, the files are created in that directory.
This PR fixes#1243 by modifying create_mass_testing_cmdline() to handle the --outfile, -oa, --outFile, and -oA options in the case that the filename provided is not "auto." It also modifies create_mass_testing_cmdline() so that in the case of serial testing -oj and -oJ are treated the same as --jsonfile and --jsonfile-pretty, respectively.
As a result of #1225 every Linux binary needed was not allowed
to come from busybox. Which caused the Dockerfile in this repo
and the image @ dockerhub to fail.
This PR relaxes that so that busybox binaries which proved to
work can be used. A whitelist was defined.
This PR addresses the following issues raised by shellcheck:
In ../github/testssl_2.9dev_20190409b.sh line 1133:
if [[ "$BASH_VERSINFO" == 3 ]]; then
^-- SC2128: Expanding an array without an index only gives the first element.
In ../github/testssl_2.9dev_20190409b.sh line 4301:
tmpfile_handle $FUNCNAME.dd
^-- SC2128: Expanding an array without an index only gives the first element.
In ../github/testssl_2.9dev_20190409b.sh line 4388:
tmpfile_handle $FUNCNAME.dd
^-- SC2128: Expanding an array without an index only gives the first element.
In ../github/testssl_2.9dev_20190409b.sh line 4657:
tmpfile_handle $FUNCNAME$1.txt
^-- SC2128: Expanding an array without an index only gives the first element.
In ../github/testssl_2.9dev_20190409b.sh line 5327:
tmpfile_handle $FUNCNAME.${debugname}.txt
^-- SC2128: Expanding an array without an index only gives the first element.
In ../github/testssl_2.9dev_20190409b.sh line 5943:
tmpfile_handle $FUNCNAME.byID.log $tmpfile || \
^-- SC2128: Expanding an array without an index only gives the first element.
In ../github/testssl_2.9dev_20190409b.sh line 5944:
tmpfile_handle $FUNCNAME.byticket.log $tmpfile
^-- SC2128: Expanding an array without an index only gives the first element.
In ../github/testssl_2.9dev_20190409b.sh line 12410:
tmpfile_handle $FUNCNAME.dd $SOCK_REPLY_FILE
^-- SC2128: Expanding an array without an index only gives the first element.
In ../github/testssl_2.9dev_20190409b.sh line 13164:
tmpfile_handle $FUNCNAME.dd
^-- SC2128: Expanding an array without an index only gives the first element.
In ../github/testssl_2.9dev_20190409b.sh line 13284:
tmpfile_handle $FUNCNAME.dd $SOCK_REPLY_FILE
^-- SC2128: Expanding an array without an index only gives the first element.
In ../github/testssl_2.9dev_20190409b.sh line 13388:
tmpfile_handle $FUNCNAME.dd $SOCK_REPLY_FILE
^-- SC2128: Expanding an array without an index only gives the first element.
--
In ../github/testssl_2.9dev_20190409b.sh line 13801:
[[ "$DEBUG" -ge 1 ]] && echo $tls_hello_ascii >$TEMPDIR/$FUNCNAME.tls_hello_ascii${i}.txt
^-- SC2128: Expanding an array without an index only gives the first element.
When users try to reinvent the wheel and write an own dockerfile
this PR checks when binaries come from busybox -- as it is the
case with Alpine Linux.
This PR fixes#803 and emit an extra warning if the certificate
has a lifetime longer or equal of five years which happens often
on appliances with self signed certificates. (CAs do not offer
such a long certificate lifetime.) This was tested under Linux,
FreeBSD and OpenBSD. On the latter however we only check the
years as opposed to other OS where we have a finer granularity
(seconds).
On the screen there's only an output if the lifetime is too long,
using JSON or CSV formats, it is always displayed (ID: cert_validityPeriod).
Also this PR changes the ID cert_expiration_status to cert_expirationStatus.
Older FreeBSD and OpenBSD can't deal with italics characters but it output
the escape codes which could result in a different markup. This PR detects
such OS and just doesn't dsiplay the escape sequence.
Also the manpage is reflecting the change and has updates in the server
defaults and standard cipher checks section.