c8ff119316
In some cases the server's response to a ClientHello spans more than one packet. If the goal is just to determine whether the connection was successful and to extract a few pieces of information from the ServerHello message, then this is unlikely to be a problem. However, if there is a desire to extract the server's certificate chain (Certificate message) or to determine the type and size of the server's ephemeral public key (ServerKeyExchange message), then the entire response needs to be obtained, even if it spans multiple packets. This PR adds a new function, `check_tls_serverhellodone()`, that checks whether the entire response has been received (e.g., whether the ServerHelloDone message has been received). If the response indicates that the response is incomplete, then `tls_sockets()` requests more data from the server until the response is complete or until the server doesn't provide any more data in response. The PR only changes the behavior of `tls_sockets()` if the caller indicates that it wants to extract the ephemeral key or that it wants the entire response to be parsed. Otherwise, only the first packet returned by the server is sent to `parse_tls_serverhello()`. [The value of `$process_full` is not used at the moment, but will be in a subsequent PR that modifies `parse_tls_serverhello()`.] This PR also changes `tls_sockets()` to send a close_notify to the server if the connection was successfully established. |
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bin | ||
etc | ||
t | ||
utils | ||
.gitignore | ||
.travis.yml | ||
CHANGELOG.stable-releases.txt | ||
CREDITS.md | ||
LICENSE | ||
openssl-rfc.mappping.html | ||
Readme.md | ||
testssl.sh |
Intro
testssl.sh
is a free command line tool which checks a server's service on
any port for the support of TLS/SSL ciphers, protocols as well as some
cryptographic flaws.
Key features
- Clear output: you can tell easily whether anything is good or bad
- Ease of installation: It works for Linux, Darwin, FreeBSD, NetBSD and MSYS2/Cygwin out of the box: no need to install or configure something, no gems, CPAN, pip or the like.
- Flexibility: You can test any SSL/TLS enabled and STARTTLS service, not only webservers at port 443
- Toolbox: Several command line options help you to run YOUR test and configure YOUR output
- Reliability: features are tested thoroughly
- Verbosity: If a particular check cannot be performed because of a missing capability on your client side, you'll get a warning
- Privacy: It's only you who sees the result, not a third party
- Freedom: It's 100% open source. You can look at the code, see what's going on and you can change it.
- Heck, even the development is open (github)
General
Here in the master branch you find the development version of the software -- with new features and maybe some bugs. For the stable version and a more thorough description of the command line options please see testssl.sh.
testssl.sh is working on every Linux/BSD distribution out of the box with
some limitations of disabled features from the openssl client -- some
workarounds are done with bash-socket-based checks. It also works on other
unixoid system out of the box, supposed they have /bin/bash
and standard
tools like sed and awk installed. MacOS X and Windows (using MSYS2 or
cygwin) work too. OpenSSL version >= 1 is a must. OpenSSL version >= 1.0.2
is needed for better LOGJAM checks and to display bit strengths for key
exchanges.
Current Development
Planned features in the release 2.7dev/2.8 are:
https://github.com/drwetter/testssl.sh/milestones/2.7dev%20%282.8%29
Done so far:
- Trust chain check against certificate stores from Apple (OS), Linux (OS), Microsoft (OS), Mozilla (Firefox Browser), works for openssl >=1.0.1
- IPv6 (status: 80% working, details see https://github.com/drwetter/testssl.sh/issues/11
- works on servers requiring a x509 certificate for authentication
- SSL Session ID check
- Avahi/mDNS based name resolution
- HTTP2/ALPN protocol check
- Logging to a file / dir
- Logging to JSON + CSV
- Check for multiple server certificates
- Browser cipher simulation
- Assistance for color-blind users
- Even more compatibility improvements for FreeBSD, NetBSD, Gentoo, RH-ish, F5 and Cisco systems
- Considerable speed improvements for each cipher runs (-e/-E)
- More robust socket interface
- OpenSSL 1.1.0 compliant
- Whole number of bugs squashed
Update notification here or @ twitter.
Contributions
Contributions, feedback, bug reports are welcome! For contributions please note: One patch per feature -- bug fix/improvement. Please test your changes thouroughly as reliability is important for this project.
There's coding guideline.
Please file bug reports @ https://github.com/drwetter/testssl.sh/issues.
Documentation
For a start see the wiki. Help is needed here.
Bug reports
Please file bugs in the issue tracker. Do not forget to provide detailed information, see https://github.com/drwetter/testssl.sh/wiki/Bug-reporting. (Nobody can read your thoughts -- yet. And only agencies your screen) ;-)
External/related projects
Please address questions not specifically to the code of testssl.sh to the respective projects