e7eac77be4
This PR address a problem in `run_drown()` when the server does not support SSLv2, but does support multiple certificates or doesn't have an RSA certificate. One example of the problem can be seen with www.facebook.com. If `run_server_preferences()` is run before `run_drown()`, then the results of `run_drown()` are: ``` DROWN (2016-0800, CVE-2016-0703) not vulnerable on this port (OK) make sure you don't use this certificate elsewhere with SSLv2 enabled services https://censys.io/ipv4?q=A626B154CC65634181250B810B1BD4C89EC277CEA08D785EEBE7E768BDA7BB00 SHA256 A3F474FB17509AE6C5B6BA5E46B79E0DE6AF1BF1EEAA040A6114676E714C9965 could help you to find out ``` If only `run_drown()` is performed, then the result is: ``` DROWN (2016-0800, CVE-2016-0703) not vulnerable on this port (OK) make sure you don't use this certificate elsewhere with SSLv2 enabled services https://censys.io/ipv4?q=A626B154CC65634181250B810B1BD4C89EC277CEA08D785EEBE7E768BDA7BB00 could help you to find out ``` However, A626B154CC65634181250B810B1BD4C89EC277CEA08D785EEBE7E768BDA7BB00 is the fingerprint of Facebook's ECDSA certificate, not its RSA certificate. In addition, as noted in the "FIXME," `run_drown()` will display the warning "make sure you don't use this certificate elsewhere with SSLv2 enabled services" even if the server doesn't have an RSA certificate, even though SSLv2 can only use RSA certificates. This PR fixes this issue by only showing the warning if the server has an RSA certificate and by ensuring that the `$cert_fingerprint_sha2` used to construct the "https://censys.io/ipv4?q=..." URL only contains a single SHA256 fingerprint and that it is the fingerprint of the server's RSA certificate. |
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bin | ||
etc | ||
t | ||
utils | ||
.gitignore | ||
.travis.yml | ||
CHANGELOG.stable-releases.txt | ||
CREDITS.md | ||
LICENSE | ||
Readme.md | ||
openssl-rfc.mappping.html | ||
testssl.sh |
Readme.md
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)
Status
Here in the 2.9dev 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 or https://github.com/drwetter/testssl.sh/wiki/Usage-Documentation.
Compatibility
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.
Update notification here or @ twitter.
Features implemented in 2.9dev
- Support of supplying timeout value for
openssl connect
-- useful for batch/mass scanning - TLS 1.2 protocol check via socket
- Further TLS socket improvements (handshake parsing, completeness, robustness)
- non-flat JSON support
- in file output (CSV, JSON flat, JSON non-flat) support of a minimum severity level (only above supplied level there will be output)
- testing 359 default ciphers (
testssl.sh -e
) with a mixture of sockets and openssl. Same speed as with openssl only but addtional ciphers such as post-quantum ciphers, new CHAHA20/POLY1305, CamelliaGCM etc. - finding more TLS extensions via sockets
- TLS Supported Groups Registry (RFC 7919), key shares extension
Features planned in 2.9dev
https://github.com/drwetter/testssl.sh/issues?q=is%3Aopen+is%3Aissue+milestone%3A2.9dev
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