.. as it may not be available everywhere, see #1521 (NixOS).
This commit replaces all instances from pwd or /bin/pwd by $PWD.
It is a bash internal and the fastest. Also it added some quotes
to PWD a it may contain white spaces in the future (currently
there's a check for it that it won't)
This commit addresses two bugs: #1506 and #1508.
First, the variable rDNS can contain multiple lines due to multiple PTR DNS
records, though this is not recommended. In those cases the multiple PTR DNS
were concatenated on the screen, without any blank.
Secondly - depending on the name server entries and on the output of the DNS
binaries used it can contain non-printable characters or characters which are
printable but later on interpreted on the output device (\032 was mentioned
in #1506) which on the screen was interpreted as octal 32 (decimal 26 = ▒,
try echo "\032"), so basically a terminal escape sequence was smuggled
from the DNS server to the screen of the users. In JSON pretty output we
had also this escape sequence which was fine for jsonlint but caused jq
to hiccup.
Fix: we use a loop to check for each FQDN returned. There we remove chars which
under those circumstances can show up. The blacklist is taken from RFC 1912
("Allowable characters in a label for a host name are only ASCII, letters, digits,
and the `-' character").
Hostnames can contain a trailing dot (and sometimes they should).
If they are supplied to testssl.sh however they will be also interpreted
as a URL PATH when the servive is HTTP.
This commit fixes that.
See also #1490
This switch had no effect. There was probably a regression
problem as it worked before.
Besides fixing that the large case statement in parse_cmd_line()
was simplified, in a sense that banner and help functions were
moved to a separate case statement.
This PR simplifies the code for determining which draft version of TLS 1.3 a server is offering by making use of a simple regular expression and $BASH_REMATCH rather than looping through every possible draft version.
PR #1463 changed run_ssl_poodle() to only run the test if it is known that the server supports SSLv3. However, support for SSLv3 may be unknown at the time run_ssl_poodle() is run (e.g., if the server supports TLS 1 and SSLv3, and run_ssl_poodle() is the first test performed). So, run_ssl_poodle() should perform testing unless it is known that SSLv3 is not supported.
There's a check for >825 days certificate lifetime. That
check emits a debug statement when the lifetime is within
this limit. It does that also when the certificate expired.
This commit adds now the word "total"
DEBUG: all is fine with total certificate life time
to make sure the life time left not is what should be understood.
... by adding the formerly intruoced "DEBUG" statement as a filter.
Note: "DEBUG" can now / should now be taken preferably for extra
output on debug level 1.
Replacing badssl.com by testssl.net. The former needed almost 5 min
for a run, whereas one IP of testssl.net needs ~80 secs. With --fast
even less.
Several vulnerability checks add a time penalty when the server
side only support TLS 1.3 as The TLS 1.3 RFC 8446 and implementations
known so far don't support the flaws being checked for.
This PR adds "shortcut" checks for all TLS 1.3, assuming that the
TLS 1.3 implementation is correct which seems at this time a valid
assumpution. That either saves a TCP connect or at least some logic to
be executed. Also in some cases a TLS 1.3 only server emitted unnecessary
warnings, see #1444.
If $DEBUG -eq 1 then it outputs information that a shortcut was
used. It doesn't do that in other cases because the screen output
seems too obtrusive.
It also adds a shortcut for beast when SSL 3 or TLS 1.0 is is known
not to be supported.
This commit radds 747fb039ed which
was accidenially reverted in 45f28d8166.
It fixes#1462.
See also #1459.