/************************************************* * Exim - an Internet mail transport agent * *************************************************/ /* Copyright (c) University of Cambridge 1995 - 2012 */ /* See the file NOTICE for conditions of use and distribution. */ /* Copyright (c) Phil Pennock 2012 */ /* This file provides TLS/SSL support for Exim using the GnuTLS library, one of the available supported implementations. This file is #included into tls.c when USE_GNUTLS has been set. The code herein is a revamp of GnuTLS integration using the current APIs; the original tls-gnu.c was based on a patch which was contributed by Nikos Mavroyanopoulos. The revamp is partially a rewrite, partially cut&paste as appropriate. APIs current as of GnuTLS 2.12.18; note that the GnuTLS manual is for GnuTLS 3, which is not widely deployed by OS vendors. Will note issues below, which may assist in updating the code in the future. Another sources of hints is mod_gnutls for Apache (SNI callback registration and handling). Keeping client and server variables more split than before and is currently the norm, in anticipation of TLS in ACL callouts. I wanted to switch to gnutls_certificate_set_verify_function() so that certificate rejection could happen during handshake where it belongs, rather than being dropped afterwards, but that was introduced in 2.10.0 and Debian (6.0.5) is still on 2.8.6. So for now we have to stick with sub-par behaviour. (I wasn't looking for libraries quite that old, when updating to get rid of compiler warnings of deprecated APIs. If it turns out that a lot of the rest require current GnuTLS, then we'll drop support for the ancient libraries). */ #include /* needed for cert checks in verification and DN extraction: */ #include /* man-page is incorrect, gnutls_rnd() is not in gnutls.h: */ #include /* needed to disable PKCS11 autoload unless requested */ #if GNUTLS_VERSION_NUMBER >= 0x020c00 # include #endif /* GnuTLS 2 vs 3 GnuTLS 3 only: gnutls_global_set_audit_log_function() Changes: gnutls_certificate_verify_peers2(): is new, drop the 2 for old version */ /* Local static variables for GnuTLS */ /* Values for verify_requirement */ enum peer_verify_requirement { VERIFY_NONE, VERIFY_OPTIONAL, VERIFY_REQUIRED }; /* This holds most state for server or client; with this, we can set up an outbound TLS-enabled connection in an ACL callout, while not stomping all over the TLS variables available for expansion. Some of these correspond to variables in globals.c; those variables will be set to point to content in one of these instances, as appropriate for the stage of the process lifetime. Not handled here: global tls_channelbinding_b64. */ typedef struct exim_gnutls_state { gnutls_session_t session; gnutls_certificate_credentials_t x509_cred; gnutls_priority_t priority_cache; enum peer_verify_requirement verify_requirement; int fd_in; int fd_out; BOOL peer_cert_verified; BOOL trigger_sni_changes; BOOL have_set_peerdn; const struct host_item *host; uschar *peerdn; uschar *ciphersuite; uschar *received_sni; const uschar *tls_certificate; const uschar *tls_privatekey; const uschar *tls_sni; /* client send only, not received */ const uschar *tls_verify_certificates; const uschar *tls_crl; const uschar *tls_require_ciphers; uschar *exp_tls_certificate; uschar *exp_tls_privatekey; uschar *exp_tls_sni; uschar *exp_tls_verify_certificates; uschar *exp_tls_crl; uschar *exp_tls_require_ciphers; tls_support *tlsp; /* set in tls_init() */ uschar *xfer_buffer; int xfer_buffer_lwm; int xfer_buffer_hwm; int xfer_eof; int xfer_error; } exim_gnutls_state_st; static const exim_gnutls_state_st exim_gnutls_state_init = { NULL, NULL, NULL, VERIFY_NONE, -1, -1, FALSE, FALSE, FALSE, NULL, NULL, NULL, NULL, NULL, NULL, NULL, NULL, NULL, NULL, NULL, NULL, NULL, NULL, NULL, NULL, NULL, NULL, 0, 0, 0, 0, }; /* Not only do we have our own APIs which don't pass around state, assuming it's held in globals, GnuTLS doesn't appear to let us register callback data for callbacks, or as part of the session, so we have to keep a "this is the context we're currently dealing with" pointer and rely upon being single-threaded to keep from processing data on an inbound TLS connection while talking to another TLS connection for an outbound check. This does mean that there's no way for heart-beats to be responded to, for the duration of the second connection. */ static exim_gnutls_state_st state_server, state_client; /* dh_params are initialised once within the lifetime of a process using TLS; if we used TLS in a long-lived daemon, we'd have to reconsider this. But we don't want to repeat this. */ static gnutls_dh_params_t dh_server_params = NULL; /* No idea how this value was chosen; preserving it. Default is 3600. */ static const int ssl_session_timeout = 200; static const char * const exim_default_gnutls_priority = "NORMAL"; /* Guard library core initialisation */ static BOOL exim_gnutls_base_init_done = FALSE; /* ------------------------------------------------------------------------ */ /* macros */ #define MAX_HOST_LEN 255 /* Set this to control gnutls_global_set_log_level(); values 0 to 9 will setup the library logging; a value less than 0 disables the calls to set up logging callbacks. */ #ifndef EXIM_GNUTLS_LIBRARY_LOG_LEVEL #define EXIM_GNUTLS_LIBRARY_LOG_LEVEL -1 #endif #ifndef EXIM_CLIENT_DH_MIN_BITS #define EXIM_CLIENT_DH_MIN_BITS 1024 #endif /* With GnuTLS 2.12.x+ we have gnutls_sec_param_to_pk_bits() with which we can ask for a bit-strength. Without that, we stick to the constant we had before, for now. */ #ifndef EXIM_SERVER_DH_BITS_PRE2_12 #define EXIM_SERVER_DH_BITS_PRE2_12 1024 #endif #define exim_gnutls_err_check(Label) do { \ if (rc != GNUTLS_E_SUCCESS) { return tls_error((Label), gnutls_strerror(rc), host); } } while (0) #define expand_check_tlsvar(Varname) expand_check(state->Varname, US #Varname, &state->exp_##Varname) #if GNUTLS_VERSION_NUMBER >= 0x020c00 #define HAVE_GNUTLS_SESSION_CHANNEL_BINDING #define HAVE_GNUTLS_SEC_PARAM_CONSTANTS #define HAVE_GNUTLS_RND /* The security fix we provide with the gnutls_allow_auto_pkcs11 option * (4.82 PP/09) introduces a compatibility regression. The symbol simply * isn't available sometimes, so this needs to become a conditional * compilation; the sanest way to deal with this being a problem on * older OSes is to block it in the Local/Makefile with this compiler * definition */ #ifndef AVOID_GNUTLS_PKCS11 #define HAVE_GNUTLS_PKCS11 #endif /* AVOID_GNUTLS_PKCS11 */ #endif /* ------------------------------------------------------------------------ */ /* Callback declarations */ #if EXIM_GNUTLS_LIBRARY_LOG_LEVEL >= 0 static void exim_gnutls_logger_cb(int level, const char *message); #endif static int exim_sni_handling_cb(gnutls_session_t session); /* ------------------------------------------------------------------------ */ /* Static functions */ /************************************************* * Handle TLS error * *************************************************/ /* Called from lots of places when errors occur before actually starting to do the TLS handshake, that is, while the session is still in clear. Always returns DEFER for a server and FAIL for a client so that most calls can use "return tls_error(...)" to do this processing and then give an appropriate return. A single function is used for both server and client, because it is called from some shared functions. Argument: prefix text to include in the logged error msg additional error string (may be NULL) usually obtained from gnutls_strerror() host NULL if setting up a server; the connected host if setting up a client Returns: OK/DEFER/FAIL */ static int tls_error(const uschar *prefix, const char *msg, const host_item *host) { if (host) { log_write(0, LOG_MAIN, "TLS error on connection to %s [%s] (%s)%s%s", host->name, host->address, prefix, msg ? ": " : "", msg ? msg : ""); return FAIL; } else { uschar *conn_info = smtp_get_connection_info(); if (Ustrncmp(conn_info, US"SMTP ", 5) == 0) conn_info += 5; log_write(0, LOG_MAIN, "TLS error on %s (%s)%s%s", conn_info, prefix, msg ? ": " : "", msg ? msg : ""); return DEFER; } } /************************************************* * Deal with logging errors during I/O * *************************************************/ /* We have to get the identity of the peer from saved data. Argument: state the current GnuTLS exim state container rc the GnuTLS error code, or 0 if it's a local error when text identifying read or write text local error text when ec is 0 Returns: nothing */ static void record_io_error(exim_gnutls_state_st *state, int rc, uschar *when, uschar *text) { const char *msg; if (rc == GNUTLS_E_FATAL_ALERT_RECEIVED) msg = CS string_sprintf("%s: %s", US gnutls_strerror(rc), US gnutls_alert_get_name(gnutls_alert_get(state->session))); else msg = gnutls_strerror(rc); tls_error(when, msg, state->host); } /************************************************* * Set various Exim expansion vars * *************************************************/ /* We set various Exim global variables from the state, once a session has been established. With TLS callouts, may need to change this to stack variables, or just re-call it with the server state after client callout has finished. Make sure anything set here is inset in tls_getc(). Sets: tls_active fd tls_bits strength indicator tls_certificate_verified bool indicator tls_channelbinding_b64 for some SASL mechanisms tls_cipher a string tls_peerdn a string tls_sni a (UTF-8) string Argument: state the relevant exim_gnutls_state_st * */ static void extract_exim_vars_from_tls_state(exim_gnutls_state_st *state, BOOL is_server) { gnutls_cipher_algorithm_t cipher; #ifdef HAVE_GNUTLS_SESSION_CHANNEL_BINDING int old_pool; int rc; gnutls_datum_t channel; #endif state->tlsp->active = state->fd_out; cipher = gnutls_cipher_get(state->session); /* returns size in "bytes" */ state->tlsp->bits = gnutls_cipher_get_key_size(cipher) * 8; state->tlsp->cipher = state->ciphersuite; DEBUG(D_tls) debug_printf("cipher: %s\n", state->ciphersuite); state->tlsp->certificate_verified = state->peer_cert_verified; /* note that tls_channelbinding_b64 is not saved to the spool file, since it's only available for use for authenticators while this TLS session is running. */ tls_channelbinding_b64 = NULL; #ifdef HAVE_GNUTLS_SESSION_CHANNEL_BINDING channel.data = NULL; channel.size = 0; rc = gnutls_session_channel_binding(state->session, GNUTLS_CB_TLS_UNIQUE, &channel); if (rc) { DEBUG(D_tls) debug_printf("Channel binding error: %s\n", gnutls_strerror(rc)); } else { old_pool = store_pool; store_pool = POOL_PERM; tls_channelbinding_b64 = auth_b64encode(channel.data, (int)channel.size); store_pool = old_pool; DEBUG(D_tls) debug_printf("Have channel bindings cached for possible auth usage.\n"); } #endif state->tlsp->peerdn = state->peerdn; state->tlsp->sni = state->received_sni; } /************************************************* * Setup up DH parameters * *************************************************/ /* Generating the D-H parameters may take a long time. They only need to be re-generated every so often, depending on security policy. What we do is to keep these parameters in a file in the spool directory. If the file does not exist, we generate them. This means that it is easy to cause a regeneration. The new file is written as a temporary file and renamed, so that an incomplete file is never present. If two processes both compute some new parameters, you waste a bit of effort, but it doesn't seem worth messing around with locking to prevent this. Returns: OK/DEFER/FAIL */ static int init_server_dh(void) { int fd, rc; unsigned int dh_bits; gnutls_datum m; uschar filename_buf[PATH_MAX]; uschar *filename = NULL; size_t sz; uschar *exp_tls_dhparam; BOOL use_file_in_spool = FALSE; BOOL use_fixed_file = FALSE; host_item *host = NULL; /* dummy for macros */ DEBUG(D_tls) debug_printf("Initialising GnuTLS server params.\n"); rc = gnutls_dh_params_init(&dh_server_params); exim_gnutls_err_check(US"gnutls_dh_params_init"); m.data = NULL; m.size = 0; if (!expand_check(tls_dhparam, US"tls_dhparam", &exp_tls_dhparam)) return DEFER; if (!exp_tls_dhparam) { DEBUG(D_tls) debug_printf("Loading default hard-coded DH params\n"); m.data = US std_dh_prime_default(); m.size = Ustrlen(m.data); } else if (Ustrcmp(exp_tls_dhparam, "historic") == 0) use_file_in_spool = TRUE; else if (Ustrcmp(exp_tls_dhparam, "none") == 0) { DEBUG(D_tls) debug_printf("Requested no DH parameters.\n"); return OK; } else if (exp_tls_dhparam[0] != '/') { m.data = US std_dh_prime_named(exp_tls_dhparam); if (m.data == NULL) return tls_error(US"No standard prime named", CS exp_tls_dhparam, NULL); m.size = Ustrlen(m.data); } else { use_fixed_file = TRUE; filename = exp_tls_dhparam; } if (m.data) { rc = gnutls_dh_params_import_pkcs3(dh_server_params, &m, GNUTLS_X509_FMT_PEM); exim_gnutls_err_check(US"gnutls_dh_params_import_pkcs3"); DEBUG(D_tls) debug_printf("Loaded fixed standard D-H parameters\n"); return OK; } #ifdef HAVE_GNUTLS_SEC_PARAM_CONSTANTS /* If you change this constant, also change dh_param_fn_ext so that we can use a different filename and ensure we have sufficient bits. */ dh_bits = gnutls_sec_param_to_pk_bits(GNUTLS_PK_DH, GNUTLS_SEC_PARAM_NORMAL); if (!dh_bits) return tls_error(US"gnutls_sec_param_to_pk_bits() failed", NULL, NULL); DEBUG(D_tls) debug_printf("GnuTLS tells us that for D-H PK, NORMAL is %d bits.\n", dh_bits); #else dh_bits = EXIM_SERVER_DH_BITS_PRE2_12; DEBUG(D_tls) debug_printf("GnuTLS lacks gnutls_sec_param_to_pk_bits(), using %d bits.\n", dh_bits); #endif /* Some clients have hard-coded limits. */ if (dh_bits > tls_dh_max_bits) { DEBUG(D_tls) debug_printf("tls_dh_max_bits clamping override, using %d bits instead.\n", tls_dh_max_bits); dh_bits = tls_dh_max_bits; } if (use_file_in_spool) { if (!string_format(filename_buf, sizeof(filename_buf), "%s/gnutls-params-%d", spool_directory, dh_bits)) return tls_error(US"overlong filename", NULL, NULL); filename = filename_buf; } /* Open the cache file for reading and if successful, read it and set up the parameters. */ fd = Uopen(filename, O_RDONLY, 0); if (fd >= 0) { struct stat statbuf; FILE *fp; int saved_errno; if (fstat(fd, &statbuf) < 0) /* EIO */ { saved_errno = errno; (void)close(fd); return tls_error(US"TLS cache stat failed", strerror(saved_errno), NULL); } if (!S_ISREG(statbuf.st_mode)) { (void)close(fd); return tls_error(US"TLS cache not a file", NULL, NULL); } fp = fdopen(fd, "rb"); if (!fp) { saved_errno = errno; (void)close(fd); return tls_error(US"fdopen(TLS cache stat fd) failed", strerror(saved_errno), NULL); } m.size = statbuf.st_size; m.data = malloc(m.size); if (m.data == NULL) { fclose(fp); return tls_error(US"malloc failed", strerror(errno), NULL); } sz = fread(m.data, m.size, 1, fp); if (!sz) { saved_errno = errno; fclose(fp); free(m.data); return tls_error(US"fread failed", strerror(saved_errno), NULL); } fclose(fp); rc = gnutls_dh_params_import_pkcs3(dh_server_params, &m, GNUTLS_X509_FMT_PEM); free(m.data); exim_gnutls_err_check(US"gnutls_dh_params_import_pkcs3"); DEBUG(D_tls) debug_printf("read D-H parameters from file \"%s\"\n", filename); } /* If the file does not exist, fall through to compute new data and cache it. If there was any other opening error, it is serious. */ else if (errno == ENOENT) { rc = -1; DEBUG(D_tls) debug_printf("D-H parameter cache file \"%s\" does not exist\n", filename); } else return tls_error(string_open_failed(errno, "\"%s\" for reading", filename), NULL, NULL); /* If ret < 0, either the cache file does not exist, or the data it contains is not useful. One particular case of this is when upgrading from an older release of Exim in which the data was stored in a different format. We don't try to be clever and support both formats; we just regenerate new data in this case. */ if (rc < 0) { uschar *temp_fn; unsigned int dh_bits_gen = dh_bits; if ((PATH_MAX - Ustrlen(filename)) < 10) return tls_error(US"Filename too long to generate replacement", CS filename, NULL); temp_fn = string_copy(US "%s.XXXXXXX"); fd = mkstemp(CS temp_fn); /* modifies temp_fn */ if (fd < 0) return tls_error(US"Unable to open temp file", strerror(errno), NULL); (void)fchown(fd, exim_uid, exim_gid); /* Probably not necessary */ /* GnuTLS overshoots! * If we ask for 2236, we might get 2237 or more. * But there's no way to ask GnuTLS how many bits there really are. * We can ask how many bits were used in a TLS session, but that's it! * The prime itself is hidden behind too much abstraction. * So we ask for less, and proceed on a wing and a prayer. * First attempt, subtracted 3 for 2233 and got 2240. */ if (dh_bits >= EXIM_CLIENT_DH_MIN_BITS + 10) { dh_bits_gen = dh_bits - 10; DEBUG(D_tls) debug_printf("being paranoid about DH generation, make it '%d' bits'\n", dh_bits_gen); } DEBUG(D_tls) debug_printf("requesting generation of %d bit Diffie-Hellman prime ...\n", dh_bits_gen); rc = gnutls_dh_params_generate2(dh_server_params, dh_bits_gen); exim_gnutls_err_check(US"gnutls_dh_params_generate2"); /* gnutls_dh_params_export_pkcs3() will tell us the exact size, every time, and I confirmed that a NULL call to get the size first is how the GnuTLS sample apps handle this. */ sz = 0; m.data = NULL; rc = gnutls_dh_params_export_pkcs3(dh_server_params, GNUTLS_X509_FMT_PEM, m.data, &sz); if (rc != GNUTLS_E_SHORT_MEMORY_BUFFER) exim_gnutls_err_check(US"gnutls_dh_params_export_pkcs3(NULL) sizing"); m.size = sz; m.data = malloc(m.size); if (m.data == NULL) return tls_error(US"memory allocation failed", strerror(errno), NULL); /* this will return a size 1 less than the allocation size above */ rc = gnutls_dh_params_export_pkcs3(dh_server_params, GNUTLS_X509_FMT_PEM, m.data, &sz); if (rc != GNUTLS_E_SUCCESS) { free(m.data); exim_gnutls_err_check(US"gnutls_dh_params_export_pkcs3() real"); } m.size = sz; /* shrink by 1, probably */ sz = write_to_fd_buf(fd, m.data, (size_t) m.size); if (sz != m.size) { free(m.data); return tls_error(US"TLS cache write D-H params failed", strerror(errno), NULL); } free(m.data); sz = write_to_fd_buf(fd, US"\n", 1); if (sz != 1) return tls_error(US"TLS cache write D-H params final newline failed", strerror(errno), NULL); rc = close(fd); if (rc) return tls_error(US"TLS cache write close() failed", strerror(errno), NULL); if (Urename(temp_fn, filename) < 0) return tls_error(string_sprintf("failed to rename \"%s\" as \"%s\"", temp_fn, filename), strerror(errno), NULL); DEBUG(D_tls) debug_printf("wrote D-H parameters to file \"%s\"\n", filename); } DEBUG(D_tls) debug_printf("initialized server D-H parameters\n"); return OK; } /************************************************* * Variables re-expanded post-SNI * *************************************************/ /* Called from both server and client code, via tls_init(), and also from the SNI callback after receiving an SNI, if tls_certificate includes "tls_sni". We can tell the two apart by state->received_sni being non-NULL in callback. The callback should not call us unless state->trigger_sni_changes is true, which we are responsible for setting on the first pass through. Arguments: state exim_gnutls_state_st * Returns: OK/DEFER/FAIL */ static int tls_expand_session_files(exim_gnutls_state_st *state) { struct stat statbuf; int rc; const host_item *host = state->host; /* macro should be reconsidered? */ uschar *saved_tls_certificate = NULL; uschar *saved_tls_privatekey = NULL; uschar *saved_tls_verify_certificates = NULL; uschar *saved_tls_crl = NULL; int cert_count; /* We check for tls_sni *before* expansion. */ if (!state->host) { if (!state->received_sni) { if (state->tls_certificate && (Ustrstr(state->tls_certificate, US"tls_sni") || Ustrstr(state->tls_certificate, US"tls_in_sni") || Ustrstr(state->tls_certificate, US"tls_out_sni") )) { DEBUG(D_tls) debug_printf("We will re-expand TLS session files if we receive SNI.\n"); state->trigger_sni_changes = TRUE; } } else { /* useful for debugging */ saved_tls_certificate = state->exp_tls_certificate; saved_tls_privatekey = state->exp_tls_privatekey; saved_tls_verify_certificates = state->exp_tls_verify_certificates; saved_tls_crl = state->exp_tls_crl; } } rc = gnutls_certificate_allocate_credentials(&state->x509_cred); exim_gnutls_err_check(US"gnutls_certificate_allocate_credentials"); /* remember: expand_check_tlsvar() is expand_check() but fiddling with state members, assuming consistent naming; and expand_check() returns false if expansion failed, unless expansion was forced to fail. */ /* check if we at least have a certificate, before doing expensive D-H generation. */ if (!expand_check_tlsvar(tls_certificate)) return DEFER; /* certificate is mandatory in server, optional in client */ if ((state->exp_tls_certificate == NULL) || (*state->exp_tls_certificate == '\0')) { if (state->host == NULL) return tls_error(US"no TLS server certificate is specified", NULL, NULL); else DEBUG(D_tls) debug_printf("TLS: no client certificate specified; okay\n"); } if (state->tls_privatekey && !expand_check_tlsvar(tls_privatekey)) return DEFER; /* tls_privatekey is optional, defaulting to same file as certificate */ if (state->tls_privatekey == NULL || *state->tls_privatekey == '\0') { state->tls_privatekey = state->tls_certificate; state->exp_tls_privatekey = state->exp_tls_certificate; } if (state->exp_tls_certificate && *state->exp_tls_certificate) { DEBUG(D_tls) debug_printf("certificate file = %s\nkey file = %s\n", state->exp_tls_certificate, state->exp_tls_privatekey); if (state->received_sni) { if ((Ustrcmp(state->exp_tls_certificate, saved_tls_certificate) == 0) && (Ustrcmp(state->exp_tls_privatekey, saved_tls_privatekey) == 0)) { DEBUG(D_tls) debug_printf("TLS SNI: cert and key unchanged\n"); } else { DEBUG(D_tls) debug_printf("TLS SNI: have a changed cert/key pair.\n"); } } rc = gnutls_certificate_set_x509_key_file(state->x509_cred, CS state->exp_tls_certificate, CS state->exp_tls_privatekey, GNUTLS_X509_FMT_PEM); exim_gnutls_err_check( string_sprintf("cert/key setup: cert=%s key=%s", state->exp_tls_certificate, state->exp_tls_privatekey)); DEBUG(D_tls) debug_printf("TLS: cert/key registered\n"); } /* tls_certificate */ /* Set the trusted CAs file if one is provided, and then add the CRL if one is provided. Experiment shows that, if the certificate file is empty, an unhelpful error message is provided. However, if we just refrain from setting anything up in that case, certificate verification fails, which seems to be the correct behaviour. */ if (state->tls_verify_certificates && *state->tls_verify_certificates) { if (!expand_check_tlsvar(tls_verify_certificates)) return DEFER; if (state->tls_crl && *state->tls_crl) if (!expand_check_tlsvar(tls_crl)) return DEFER; if (!(state->exp_tls_verify_certificates && *state->exp_tls_verify_certificates)) { DEBUG(D_tls) debug_printf("TLS: tls_verify_certificates expanded empty, ignoring\n"); /* With no tls_verify_certificates, we ignore tls_crl too */ return OK; } } else { DEBUG(D_tls) debug_printf("TLS: tls_verify_certificates not set or empty, ignoring\n"); return OK; } if (Ustat(state->exp_tls_verify_certificates, &statbuf) < 0) { log_write(0, LOG_MAIN|LOG_PANIC, "could not stat %s " "(tls_verify_certificates): %s", state->exp_tls_verify_certificates, strerror(errno)); return DEFER; } /* The test suite passes in /dev/null; we could check for that path explicitly, but who knows if someone has some weird FIFO which always dumps some certs, or other weirdness. The thing we really want to check is that it's not a directory, since while OpenSSL supports that, GnuTLS does not. So s/!S_ISREG/S_ISDIR/ and change some messsaging ... */ if (S_ISDIR(statbuf.st_mode)) { DEBUG(D_tls) debug_printf("verify certificates path is a dir: \"%s\"\n", state->exp_tls_verify_certificates); log_write(0, LOG_MAIN|LOG_PANIC, "tls_verify_certificates \"%s\" is a directory", state->exp_tls_verify_certificates); return DEFER; } DEBUG(D_tls) debug_printf("verify certificates = %s size=" OFF_T_FMT "\n", state->exp_tls_verify_certificates, statbuf.st_size); if (statbuf.st_size == 0) { DEBUG(D_tls) debug_printf("cert file empty, no certs, no verification, ignoring any CRL\n"); return OK; } cert_count = gnutls_certificate_set_x509_trust_file(state->x509_cred, CS state->exp_tls_verify_certificates, GNUTLS_X509_FMT_PEM); if (cert_count < 0) { rc = cert_count; exim_gnutls_err_check(US"gnutls_certificate_set_x509_trust_file"); } DEBUG(D_tls) debug_printf("Added %d certificate authorities.\n", cert_count); if (state->tls_crl && *state->tls_crl && state->exp_tls_crl && *state->exp_tls_crl) { DEBUG(D_tls) debug_printf("loading CRL file = %s\n", state->exp_tls_crl); cert_count = gnutls_certificate_set_x509_crl_file(state->x509_cred, CS state->exp_tls_crl, GNUTLS_X509_FMT_PEM); if (cert_count < 0) { rc = cert_count; exim_gnutls_err_check(US"gnutls_certificate_set_x509_crl_file"); } DEBUG(D_tls) debug_printf("Processed %d CRLs.\n", cert_count); } return OK; } /************************************************* * Set X.509 state variables * *************************************************/ /* In GnuTLS, the registered cert/key are not replaced by a later set of a cert/key, so for SNI support we need a whole new x509_cred structure. Which means various other non-re-expanded pieces of state need to be re-set in the new struct, so the setting logic is pulled out to this. Arguments: state exim_gnutls_state_st * Returns: OK/DEFER/FAIL */ static int tls_set_remaining_x509(exim_gnutls_state_st *state) { int rc; const host_item *host = state->host; /* macro should be reconsidered? */ /* Create D-H parameters, or read them from the cache file. This function does its own SMTP error messaging. This only happens for the server, TLS D-H ignores client-side params. */ if (!state->host) { if (!dh_server_params) { rc = init_server_dh(); if (rc != OK) return rc; } gnutls_certificate_set_dh_params(state->x509_cred, dh_server_params); } /* Link the credentials to the session. */ rc = gnutls_credentials_set(state->session, GNUTLS_CRD_CERTIFICATE, state->x509_cred); exim_gnutls_err_check(US"gnutls_credentials_set"); return OK; } /************************************************* * Initialize for GnuTLS * *************************************************/ /* Called from both server and client code. In the case of a server, errors before actual TLS negotiation return DEFER. Arguments: host connected host, if client; NULL if server certificate certificate file privatekey private key file sni TLS SNI to send, sometimes when client; else NULL cas CA certs file crl CRL file require_ciphers tls_require_ciphers setting caller_state returned state-info structure Returns: OK/DEFER/FAIL */ static int tls_init( const host_item *host, const uschar *certificate, const uschar *privatekey, const uschar *sni, const uschar *cas, const uschar *crl, const uschar *require_ciphers, exim_gnutls_state_st **caller_state) { exim_gnutls_state_st *state; int rc; size_t sz; const char *errpos; uschar *p; BOOL want_default_priorities; if (!exim_gnutls_base_init_done) { DEBUG(D_tls) debug_printf("GnuTLS global init required.\n"); #ifdef HAVE_GNUTLS_PKCS11 /* By default, gnutls_global_init will init PKCS11 support in auto mode, which loads modules from a config file, which sounds good and may be wanted by some sysadmin, but also means in common configurations that GNOME keyring environment variables are used and so breaks for users calling mailq. To prevent this, we init PKCS11 first, which is the documented approach. */ if (!gnutls_allow_auto_pkcs11) { rc = gnutls_pkcs11_init(GNUTLS_PKCS11_FLAG_MANUAL, NULL); exim_gnutls_err_check(US"gnutls_pkcs11_init"); } #endif rc = gnutls_global_init(); exim_gnutls_err_check(US"gnutls_global_init"); #if EXIM_GNUTLS_LIBRARY_LOG_LEVEL >= 0 DEBUG(D_tls) { gnutls_global_set_log_function(exim_gnutls_logger_cb); /* arbitrarily chosen level; bump upto 9 for more */ gnutls_global_set_log_level(EXIM_GNUTLS_LIBRARY_LOG_LEVEL); } #endif exim_gnutls_base_init_done = TRUE; } if (host) { state = &state_client; memcpy(state, &exim_gnutls_state_init, sizeof(exim_gnutls_state_init)); state->tlsp = &tls_out; DEBUG(D_tls) debug_printf("initialising GnuTLS client session\n"); rc = gnutls_init(&state->session, GNUTLS_CLIENT); } else { state = &state_server; memcpy(state, &exim_gnutls_state_init, sizeof(exim_gnutls_state_init)); state->tlsp = &tls_in; DEBUG(D_tls) debug_printf("initialising GnuTLS server session\n"); rc = gnutls_init(&state->session, GNUTLS_SERVER); } exim_gnutls_err_check(US"gnutls_init"); state->host = host; state->tls_certificate = certificate; state->tls_privatekey = privatekey; state->tls_require_ciphers = require_ciphers; state->tls_sni = sni; state->tls_verify_certificates = cas; state->tls_crl = crl; /* This handles the variables that might get re-expanded after TLS SNI; that's tls_certificate, tls_privatekey, tls_verify_certificates, tls_crl */ DEBUG(D_tls) debug_printf("Expanding various TLS configuration options for session credentials.\n"); rc = tls_expand_session_files(state); if (rc != OK) return rc; /* These are all other parts of the x509_cred handling, since SNI in GnuTLS requires a new structure afterwards. */ rc = tls_set_remaining_x509(state); if (rc != OK) return rc; /* set SNI in client, only */ if (host) { if (!expand_check(state->tlsp->sni, US"tls_out_sni", &state->exp_tls_sni)) return DEFER; if (state->exp_tls_sni && *state->exp_tls_sni) { DEBUG(D_tls) debug_printf("Setting TLS client SNI to \"%s\"\n", state->exp_tls_sni); sz = Ustrlen(state->exp_tls_sni); rc = gnutls_server_name_set(state->session, GNUTLS_NAME_DNS, state->exp_tls_sni, sz); exim_gnutls_err_check(US"gnutls_server_name_set"); } } else if (state->tls_sni) DEBUG(D_tls) debug_printf("*** PROBABLY A BUG *** " \ "have an SNI set for a client [%s]\n", state->tls_sni); /* This is the priority string support, http://www.gnutls.org/manual/html_node/Priority-Strings.html and replaces gnutls_require_kx, gnutls_require_mac & gnutls_require_protocols. This was backwards incompatible, but means Exim no longer needs to track all algorithms and provide string forms for them. */ want_default_priorities = TRUE; if (state->tls_require_ciphers && *state->tls_require_ciphers) { if (!expand_check_tlsvar(tls_require_ciphers)) return DEFER; if (state->exp_tls_require_ciphers && *state->exp_tls_require_ciphers) { DEBUG(D_tls) debug_printf("GnuTLS session cipher/priority \"%s\"\n", state->exp_tls_require_ciphers); rc = gnutls_priority_init(&state->priority_cache, CS state->exp_tls_require_ciphers, &errpos); want_default_priorities = FALSE; p = state->exp_tls_require_ciphers; } } if (want_default_priorities) { DEBUG(D_tls) debug_printf("GnuTLS using default session cipher/priority \"%s\"\n", exim_default_gnutls_priority); rc = gnutls_priority_init(&state->priority_cache, exim_default_gnutls_priority, &errpos); p = US exim_default_gnutls_priority; } exim_gnutls_err_check(string_sprintf( "gnutls_priority_init(%s) failed at offset %ld, \"%.6s..\"", p, errpos - CS p, errpos)); rc = gnutls_priority_set(state->session, state->priority_cache); exim_gnutls_err_check(US"gnutls_priority_set"); gnutls_db_set_cache_expiration(state->session, ssl_session_timeout); /* Reduce security in favour of increased compatibility, if the admin decides to make that trade-off. */ if (gnutls_compat_mode) { #if LIBGNUTLS_VERSION_NUMBER >= 0x020104 DEBUG(D_tls) debug_printf("lowering GnuTLS security, compatibility mode\n"); gnutls_session_enable_compatibility_mode(state->session); #else DEBUG(D_tls) debug_printf("Unable to set gnutls_compat_mode - GnuTLS version too old\n"); #endif } *caller_state = state; return OK; } /************************************************* * Extract peer information * *************************************************/ /* Called from both server and client code. Only this is allowed to set state->peerdn and state->have_set_peerdn and we use that to detect double-calls. NOTE: the state blocks last while the TLS connection is up, which is fine for logging in the server side, but for the client side, we log after teardown in src/deliver.c. While the session is up, we can twist about states and repoint tls_* globals, but those variables used for logging or other variable expansion that happens _after_ delivery need to have a longer life-time. So for those, we get the data from POOL_PERM; the re-invoke guard keeps us from doing this more than once per generation of a state context. We set them in the state context, and repoint tls_* to them. After the state goes away, the tls_* copies of the pointers remain valid and client delivery logging is happy. tls_certificate_verified is a BOOL, so the tls_peerdn and tls_cipher issues don't apply. Arguments: state exim_gnutls_state_st * Returns: OK/DEFER/FAIL */ static int peer_status(exim_gnutls_state_st *state) { uschar cipherbuf[256]; const gnutls_datum *cert_list; int old_pool, rc; unsigned int cert_list_size = 0; gnutls_protocol_t protocol; gnutls_cipher_algorithm_t cipher; gnutls_kx_algorithm_t kx; gnutls_mac_algorithm_t mac; gnutls_certificate_type_t ct; gnutls_x509_crt_t crt; uschar *p, *dn_buf; size_t sz; if (state->have_set_peerdn) return OK; state->have_set_peerdn = TRUE; state->peerdn = NULL; /* tls_cipher */ cipher = gnutls_cipher_get(state->session); protocol = gnutls_protocol_get_version(state->session); mac = gnutls_mac_get(state->session); kx = gnutls_kx_get(state->session); string_format(cipherbuf, sizeof(cipherbuf), "%s:%s:%d", gnutls_protocol_get_name(protocol), gnutls_cipher_suite_get_name(kx, cipher, mac), (int) gnutls_cipher_get_key_size(cipher) * 8); /* I don't see a way that spaces could occur, in the current GnuTLS code base, but it was a concern in the old code and perhaps older GnuTLS releases did return "TLS 1.0"; play it safe, just in case. */ for (p = cipherbuf; *p != '\0'; ++p) if (isspace(*p)) *p = '-'; old_pool = store_pool; store_pool = POOL_PERM; state->ciphersuite = string_copy(cipherbuf); store_pool = old_pool; state->tlsp->cipher = state->ciphersuite; /* tls_peerdn */ cert_list = gnutls_certificate_get_peers(state->session, &cert_list_size); if (cert_list == NULL || cert_list_size == 0) { DEBUG(D_tls) debug_printf("TLS: no certificate from peer (%p & %d)\n", cert_list, cert_list_size); if (state->verify_requirement == VERIFY_REQUIRED) return tls_error(US"certificate verification failed", "no certificate received from peer", state->host); return OK; } ct = gnutls_certificate_type_get(state->session); if (ct != GNUTLS_CRT_X509) { const char *ctn = gnutls_certificate_type_get_name(ct); DEBUG(D_tls) debug_printf("TLS: peer cert not X.509 but instead \"%s\"\n", ctn); if (state->verify_requirement == VERIFY_REQUIRED) return tls_error(US"certificate verification not possible, unhandled type", ctn, state->host); return OK; } #define exim_gnutls_peer_err(Label) do { \ if (rc != GNUTLS_E_SUCCESS) { \ DEBUG(D_tls) debug_printf("TLS: peer cert problem: %s: %s\n", (Label), gnutls_strerror(rc)); \ if (state->verify_requirement == VERIFY_REQUIRED) { return tls_error((Label), gnutls_strerror(rc), state->host); } \ return OK; } } while (0) rc = gnutls_x509_crt_init(&crt); exim_gnutls_peer_err(US"gnutls_x509_crt_init (crt)"); rc = gnutls_x509_crt_import(crt, &cert_list[0], GNUTLS_X509_FMT_DER); exim_gnutls_peer_err(US"failed to import certificate [gnutls_x509_crt_import(cert 0)]"); sz = 0; rc = gnutls_x509_crt_get_dn(crt, NULL, &sz); if (rc != GNUTLS_E_SHORT_MEMORY_BUFFER) { exim_gnutls_peer_err(US"getting size for cert DN failed"); return FAIL; /* should not happen */ } dn_buf = store_get_perm(sz); rc = gnutls_x509_crt_get_dn(crt, CS dn_buf, &sz); exim_gnutls_peer_err(US"failed to extract certificate DN [gnutls_x509_crt_get_dn(cert 0)]"); state->peerdn = dn_buf; return OK; #undef exim_gnutls_peer_err } /************************************************* * Verify peer certificate * *************************************************/ /* Called from both server and client code. *Should* be using a callback registered with gnutls_certificate_set_verify_function() to fail the handshake if we dislike the peer information, but that's too new for some OSes. Arguments: state exim_gnutls_state_st * error where to put an error message Returns: FALSE if the session should be rejected TRUE if the cert is okay or we just don't care */ static BOOL verify_certificate(exim_gnutls_state_st *state, const char **error) { int rc; unsigned int verify; *error = NULL; rc = peer_status(state); if (rc != OK) { verify = GNUTLS_CERT_INVALID; *error = "not supplied"; } else { rc = gnutls_certificate_verify_peers2(state->session, &verify); } /* Handle the result of verification. INVALID seems to be set as well as REVOKED, but leave the test for both. */ if ((rc < 0) || (verify & (GNUTLS_CERT_INVALID|GNUTLS_CERT_REVOKED)) != 0) { state->peer_cert_verified = FALSE; if (*error == NULL) *error = ((verify & GNUTLS_CERT_REVOKED) != 0) ? "revoked" : "invalid"; DEBUG(D_tls) debug_printf("TLS certificate verification failed (%s): peerdn=%s\n", *error, state->peerdn ? state->peerdn : US""); if (state->verify_requirement == VERIFY_REQUIRED) { gnutls_alert_send(state->session, GNUTLS_AL_FATAL, GNUTLS_A_BAD_CERTIFICATE); return FALSE; } DEBUG(D_tls) debug_printf("TLS verify failure overridden (host in tls_try_verify_hosts)\n"); } else { state->peer_cert_verified = TRUE; DEBUG(D_tls) debug_printf("TLS certificate verified: peerdn=%s\n", state->peerdn ? state->peerdn : US""); } state->tlsp->peerdn = state->peerdn; return TRUE; } /* ------------------------------------------------------------------------ */ /* Callbacks */ /* Logging function which can be registered with * gnutls_global_set_log_function() * gnutls_global_set_log_level() 0..9 */ #if EXIM_GNUTLS_LIBRARY_LOG_LEVEL >= 0 static void exim_gnutls_logger_cb(int level, const char *message) { size_t len = strlen(message); if (len < 1) { DEBUG(D_tls) debug_printf("GnuTLS<%d> empty debug message\n", level); return; } DEBUG(D_tls) debug_printf("GnuTLS<%d>: %s%s", level, message, message[len-1] == '\n' ? "" : "\n"); } #endif /* Called after client hello, should handle SNI work. This will always set tls_sni (state->received_sni) if available, and may trigger presenting different certificates, if state->trigger_sni_changes is TRUE. Should be registered with gnutls_handshake_set_post_client_hello_function() "This callback must return 0 on success or a gnutls error code to terminate the handshake.". For inability to get SNI information, we return 0. We only return non-zero if re-setup failed. Only used for server-side TLS. */ static int exim_sni_handling_cb(gnutls_session_t session) { char sni_name[MAX_HOST_LEN]; size_t data_len = MAX_HOST_LEN; exim_gnutls_state_st *state = &state_server; unsigned int sni_type; int rc, old_pool; rc = gnutls_server_name_get(session, sni_name, &data_len, &sni_type, 0); if (rc != GNUTLS_E_SUCCESS) { DEBUG(D_tls) { if (rc == GNUTLS_E_REQUESTED_DATA_NOT_AVAILABLE) debug_printf("TLS: no SNI presented in handshake.\n"); else debug_printf("TLS failure: gnutls_server_name_get(): %s [%d]\n", gnutls_strerror(rc), rc); }; return 0; } if (sni_type != GNUTLS_NAME_DNS) { DEBUG(D_tls) debug_printf("TLS: ignoring SNI of unhandled type %u\n", sni_type); return 0; } /* We now have a UTF-8 string in sni_name */ old_pool = store_pool; store_pool = POOL_PERM; state->received_sni = string_copyn(US sni_name, data_len); store_pool = old_pool; /* We set this one now so that variable expansions below will work */ state->tlsp->sni = state->received_sni; DEBUG(D_tls) debug_printf("Received TLS SNI \"%s\"%s\n", sni_name, state->trigger_sni_changes ? "" : " (unused for certificate selection)"); if (!state->trigger_sni_changes) return 0; rc = tls_expand_session_files(state); if (rc != OK) { /* If the setup of certs/etc failed before handshake, TLS would not have been offered. The best we can do now is abort. */ return GNUTLS_E_APPLICATION_ERROR_MIN; } rc = tls_set_remaining_x509(state); if (rc != OK) return GNUTLS_E_APPLICATION_ERROR_MIN; return 0; } /* ------------------------------------------------------------------------ */ /* Exported functions */ /************************************************* * Start a TLS session in a server * *************************************************/ /* This is called when Exim is running as a server, after having received the STARTTLS command. It must respond to that command, and then negotiate a TLS session. Arguments: require_ciphers list of allowed ciphers or NULL Returns: OK on success DEFER for errors before the start of the negotiation FAIL for errors during the negotation; the server can't continue running. */ int tls_server_start(const uschar *require_ciphers) { int rc; const char *error; exim_gnutls_state_st *state = NULL; /* Check for previous activation */ if (tls_in.active >= 0) { tls_error(US"STARTTLS received after TLS started", "", NULL); smtp_printf("554 Already in TLS\r\n"); return FAIL; } /* Initialize the library. If it fails, it will already have logged the error and sent an SMTP response. */ DEBUG(D_tls) debug_printf("initialising GnuTLS as a server\n"); rc = tls_init(NULL, tls_certificate, tls_privatekey, NULL, tls_verify_certificates, tls_crl, require_ciphers, &state); if (rc != OK) return rc; /* If this is a host for which certificate verification is mandatory or optional, set up appropriately. */ if (verify_check_host(&tls_verify_hosts) == OK) { DEBUG(D_tls) debug_printf("TLS: a client certificate will be required.\n"); state->verify_requirement = VERIFY_REQUIRED; gnutls_certificate_server_set_request(state->session, GNUTLS_CERT_REQUIRE); } else if (verify_check_host(&tls_try_verify_hosts) == OK) { DEBUG(D_tls) debug_printf("TLS: a client certificate will be requested but not required.\n"); state->verify_requirement = VERIFY_OPTIONAL; gnutls_certificate_server_set_request(state->session, GNUTLS_CERT_REQUEST); } else { DEBUG(D_tls) debug_printf("TLS: a client certificate will not be requested.\n"); state->verify_requirement = VERIFY_NONE; gnutls_certificate_server_set_request(state->session, GNUTLS_CERT_IGNORE); } /* Register SNI handling; always, even if not in tls_certificate, so that the expansion variable $tls_sni is always available. */ gnutls_handshake_set_post_client_hello_function(state->session, exim_sni_handling_cb); /* Set context and tell client to go ahead, except in the case of TLS startup on connection, where outputting anything now upsets the clients and tends to make them disconnect. We need to have an explicit fflush() here, to force out the response. Other smtp_printf() calls do not need it, because in non-TLS mode, the fflush() happens when smtp_getc() is called. */ if (!state->tlsp->on_connect) { smtp_printf("220 TLS go ahead\r\n"); fflush(smtp_out); /*XXX JGH */ } /* Now negotiate the TLS session. We put our own timer on it, since it seems that the GnuTLS library doesn't. */ gnutls_transport_set_ptr2(state->session, (gnutls_transport_ptr)fileno(smtp_in), (gnutls_transport_ptr)fileno(smtp_out)); state->fd_in = fileno(smtp_in); state->fd_out = fileno(smtp_out); sigalrm_seen = FALSE; if (smtp_receive_timeout > 0) alarm(smtp_receive_timeout); do { rc = gnutls_handshake(state->session); } while ((rc == GNUTLS_E_AGAIN) || (rc == GNUTLS_E_INTERRUPTED && !sigalrm_seen)); alarm(0); if (rc != GNUTLS_E_SUCCESS) { tls_error(US"gnutls_handshake", sigalrm_seen ? "timed out" : gnutls_strerror(rc), NULL); /* It seems that, except in the case of a timeout, we have to close the connection right here; otherwise if the other end is running OpenSSL it hangs until the server times out. */ if (!sigalrm_seen) { (void)fclose(smtp_out); (void)fclose(smtp_in); } return FAIL; } DEBUG(D_tls) debug_printf("gnutls_handshake was successful\n"); /* Verify after the fact */ if (state->verify_requirement != VERIFY_NONE) { if (!verify_certificate(state, &error)) { if (state->verify_requirement == VERIFY_OPTIONAL) { DEBUG(D_tls) debug_printf("TLS: continuing on only because verification was optional, after: %s\n", error); } else { tls_error(US"certificate verification failed", error, NULL); return FAIL; } } } /* Figure out peer DN, and if authenticated, etc. */ rc = peer_status(state); if (rc != OK) return rc; /* Sets various Exim expansion variables; always safe within server */ extract_exim_vars_from_tls_state(state, TRUE); /* TLS has been set up. Adjust the input functions to read via TLS, and initialize appropriately. */ state->xfer_buffer = store_malloc(ssl_xfer_buffer_size); receive_getc = tls_getc; receive_ungetc = tls_ungetc; receive_feof = tls_feof; receive_ferror = tls_ferror; receive_smtp_buffered = tls_smtp_buffered; return OK; } /************************************************* * Start a TLS session in a client * *************************************************/ /* Called from the smtp transport after STARTTLS has been accepted. Arguments: fd the fd of the connection host connected host (for messages) addr the first address (not used) certificate certificate file privatekey private key file sni TLS SNI to send to remote host verify_certs file for certificate verify verify_crl CRL for verify require_ciphers list of allowed ciphers or NULL dh_min_bits minimum number of bits acceptable in server's DH prime timeout startup timeout Returns: OK/DEFER/FAIL (because using common functions), but for a client, DEFER and FAIL have the same meaning */ int tls_client_start(int fd, host_item *host, address_item *addr ARG_UNUSED, uschar *certificate, uschar *privatekey, uschar *sni, uschar *verify_certs, uschar *verify_crl, uschar *require_ciphers, #ifdef EXPERIMENTAL_OCSP uschar *require_ocsp ARG_UNUSED, #endif int dh_min_bits, int timeout) { int rc; const char *error; exim_gnutls_state_st *state = NULL; DEBUG(D_tls) debug_printf("initialising GnuTLS as a client on fd %d\n", fd); rc = tls_init(host, certificate, privatekey, sni, verify_certs, verify_crl, require_ciphers, &state); if (rc != OK) return rc; if (dh_min_bits < EXIM_CLIENT_DH_MIN_MIN_BITS) { DEBUG(D_tls) debug_printf("WARNING: tls_dh_min_bits far too low, clamping %d up to %d\n", dh_min_bits, EXIM_CLIENT_DH_MIN_MIN_BITS); dh_min_bits = EXIM_CLIENT_DH_MIN_MIN_BITS; } DEBUG(D_tls) debug_printf("Setting D-H prime minimum acceptable bits to %d\n", dh_min_bits); gnutls_dh_set_prime_bits(state->session, dh_min_bits); if (verify_certs == NULL) { DEBUG(D_tls) debug_printf("TLS: server certificate verification not required\n"); state->verify_requirement = VERIFY_NONE; /* we still ask for it, to log it, etc */ gnutls_certificate_server_set_request(state->session, GNUTLS_CERT_REQUEST); } else { DEBUG(D_tls) debug_printf("TLS: server certificate verification required\n"); state->verify_requirement = VERIFY_REQUIRED; gnutls_certificate_server_set_request(state->session, GNUTLS_CERT_REQUIRE); } gnutls_transport_set_ptr(state->session, (gnutls_transport_ptr)fd); state->fd_in = fd; state->fd_out = fd; /* There doesn't seem to be a built-in timeout on connection. */ sigalrm_seen = FALSE; alarm(timeout); do { rc = gnutls_handshake(state->session); } while ((rc == GNUTLS_E_AGAIN) || (rc == GNUTLS_E_INTERRUPTED && !sigalrm_seen)); alarm(0); if (rc != GNUTLS_E_SUCCESS) return tls_error(US"gnutls_handshake", sigalrm_seen ? "timed out" : gnutls_strerror(rc), state->host); DEBUG(D_tls) debug_printf("gnutls_handshake was successful\n"); /* Verify late */ if (state->verify_requirement != VERIFY_NONE && !verify_certificate(state, &error)) return tls_error(US"certificate verification failed", error, state->host); /* Figure out peer DN, and if authenticated, etc. */ rc = peer_status(state); if (rc != OK) return rc; /* Sets various Exim expansion variables; may need to adjust for ACL callouts */ extract_exim_vars_from_tls_state(state, FALSE); return OK; } /************************************************* * Close down a TLS session * *************************************************/ /* This is also called from within a delivery subprocess forked from the daemon, to shut down the TLS library, without actually doing a shutdown (which would tamper with the TLS session in the parent process). Arguments: TRUE if gnutls_bye is to be called Returns: nothing */ void tls_close(BOOL is_server, BOOL shutdown) { exim_gnutls_state_st *state = is_server ? &state_server : &state_client; if (!state->tlsp || state->tlsp->active < 0) return; /* TLS was not active */ if (shutdown) { DEBUG(D_tls) debug_printf("tls_close(): shutting down TLS\n"); gnutls_bye(state->session, GNUTLS_SHUT_WR); } gnutls_deinit(state->session); state->tlsp->active = -1; memcpy(state, &exim_gnutls_state_init, sizeof(exim_gnutls_state_init)); if ((state_server.session == NULL) && (state_client.session == NULL)) { gnutls_global_deinit(); exim_gnutls_base_init_done = FALSE; } } /************************************************* * TLS version of getc * *************************************************/ /* This gets the next byte from the TLS input buffer. If the buffer is empty, it refills the buffer via the GnuTLS reading function. Only used by the server-side TLS. This feeds DKIM and should be used for all message-body reads. Arguments: none Returns: the next character or EOF */ int tls_getc(void) { exim_gnutls_state_st *state = &state_server; if (state->xfer_buffer_lwm >= state->xfer_buffer_hwm) { ssize_t inbytes; DEBUG(D_tls) debug_printf("Calling gnutls_record_recv(%p, %p, %u)\n", state->session, state->xfer_buffer, ssl_xfer_buffer_size); if (smtp_receive_timeout > 0) alarm(smtp_receive_timeout); inbytes = gnutls_record_recv(state->session, state->xfer_buffer, ssl_xfer_buffer_size); alarm(0); /* A zero-byte return appears to mean that the TLS session has been closed down, not that the socket itself has been closed down. Revert to non-TLS handling. */ if (inbytes == 0) { DEBUG(D_tls) debug_printf("Got TLS_EOF\n"); receive_getc = smtp_getc; receive_ungetc = smtp_ungetc; receive_feof = smtp_feof; receive_ferror = smtp_ferror; receive_smtp_buffered = smtp_buffered; gnutls_deinit(state->session); state->session = NULL; state->tlsp->active = -1; state->tlsp->bits = 0; state->tlsp->certificate_verified = FALSE; tls_channelbinding_b64 = NULL; /*XXX JGH */ state->tlsp->cipher = NULL; state->tlsp->peerdn = NULL; return smtp_getc(); } /* Handle genuine errors */ else if (inbytes < 0) { record_io_error(state, (int) inbytes, US"recv", NULL); state->xfer_error = 1; return EOF; } #ifndef DISABLE_DKIM dkim_exim_verify_feed(state->xfer_buffer, inbytes); #endif state->xfer_buffer_hwm = (int) inbytes; state->xfer_buffer_lwm = 0; } /* Something in the buffer; return next uschar */ return state->xfer_buffer[state->xfer_buffer_lwm++]; } /************************************************* * Read bytes from TLS channel * *************************************************/ /* This does not feed DKIM, so if the caller uses this for reading message body, then the caller must feed DKIM. Arguments: buff buffer of data len size of buffer Returns: the number of bytes read -1 after a failed read */ int tls_read(BOOL is_server, uschar *buff, size_t len) { exim_gnutls_state_st *state = is_server ? &state_server : &state_client; ssize_t inbytes; if (len > INT_MAX) len = INT_MAX; if (state->xfer_buffer_lwm < state->xfer_buffer_hwm) DEBUG(D_tls) debug_printf("*** PROBABLY A BUG *** " \ "tls_read() called with data in the tls_getc() buffer, %d ignored\n", state->xfer_buffer_hwm - state->xfer_buffer_lwm); DEBUG(D_tls) debug_printf("Calling gnutls_record_recv(%p, %p, " SIZE_T_FMT ")\n", state->session, buff, len); inbytes = gnutls_record_recv(state->session, buff, len); if (inbytes > 0) return inbytes; if (inbytes == 0) { DEBUG(D_tls) debug_printf("Got TLS_EOF\n"); } else record_io_error(state, (int)inbytes, US"recv", NULL); return -1; } /************************************************* * Write bytes down TLS channel * *************************************************/ /* Arguments: is_server channel specifier buff buffer of data len number of bytes Returns: the number of bytes after a successful write, -1 after a failed write */ int tls_write(BOOL is_server, const uschar *buff, size_t len) { ssize_t outbytes; size_t left = len; exim_gnutls_state_st *state = is_server ? &state_server : &state_client; DEBUG(D_tls) debug_printf("tls_do_write(%p, " SIZE_T_FMT ")\n", buff, left); while (left > 0) { DEBUG(D_tls) debug_printf("gnutls_record_send(SSL, %p, " SIZE_T_FMT ")\n", buff, left); outbytes = gnutls_record_send(state->session, buff, left); DEBUG(D_tls) debug_printf("outbytes=" SSIZE_T_FMT "\n", outbytes); if (outbytes < 0) { record_io_error(state, outbytes, US"send", NULL); return -1; } if (outbytes == 0) { record_io_error(state, 0, US"send", US"TLS channel closed on write"); return -1; } left -= outbytes; buff += outbytes; } if (len > INT_MAX) { DEBUG(D_tls) debug_printf("Whoops! Wrote more bytes (" SIZE_T_FMT ") than INT_MAX\n", len); len = INT_MAX; } return (int) len; } /************************************************* * Random number generation * *************************************************/ /* Pseudo-random number generation. The result is not expected to be cryptographically strong but not so weak that someone will shoot themselves in the foot using it as a nonce in input in some email header scheme or whatever weirdness they'll twist this into. The result should handle fork() and avoid repeating sequences. OpenSSL handles that for us. Arguments: max range maximum Returns a random number in range [0, max-1] */ #ifdef HAVE_GNUTLS_RND int vaguely_random_number(int max) { unsigned int r; int i, needed_len; uschar *p; uschar smallbuf[sizeof(r)]; if (max <= 1) return 0; needed_len = sizeof(r); /* Don't take 8 times more entropy than needed if int is 8 octets and we were * asked for a number less than 10. */ for (r = max, i = 0; r; ++i) r >>= 1; i = (i + 7) / 8; if (i < needed_len) needed_len = i; i = gnutls_rnd(GNUTLS_RND_NONCE, smallbuf, needed_len); if (i < 0) { DEBUG(D_all) debug_printf("gnutls_rnd() failed, using fallback.\n"); return vaguely_random_number_fallback(max); } r = 0; for (p = smallbuf; needed_len; --needed_len, ++p) { r *= 256; r += *p; } /* We don't particularly care about weighted results; if someone wants * smooth distribution and cares enough then they should submit a patch then. */ return r % max; } #else /* HAVE_GNUTLS_RND */ int vaguely_random_number(int max) { return vaguely_random_number_fallback(max); } #endif /* HAVE_GNUTLS_RND */ /************************************************* * Let tls_require_ciphers be checked at startup * *************************************************/ /* The tls_require_ciphers option, if set, must be something which the library can parse. Returns: NULL on success, or error message */ uschar * tls_validate_require_cipher(void) { int rc; uschar *expciphers = NULL; gnutls_priority_t priority_cache; const char *errpos; #define validate_check_rc(Label) do { \ if (rc != GNUTLS_E_SUCCESS) { if (exim_gnutls_base_init_done) gnutls_global_deinit(); \ return string_sprintf("%s failed: %s", (Label), gnutls_strerror(rc)); } } while (0) #define return_deinit(Label) do { gnutls_global_deinit(); return (Label); } while (0) if (exim_gnutls_base_init_done) log_write(0, LOG_MAIN|LOG_PANIC, "already initialised GnuTLS, Exim developer bug"); #ifdef HAVE_GNUTLS_PKCS11 if (!gnutls_allow_auto_pkcs11) { rc = gnutls_pkcs11_init(GNUTLS_PKCS11_FLAG_MANUAL, NULL); validate_check_rc(US"gnutls_pkcs11_init"); } #endif rc = gnutls_global_init(); validate_check_rc(US"gnutls_global_init()"); exim_gnutls_base_init_done = TRUE; if (!(tls_require_ciphers && *tls_require_ciphers)) return_deinit(NULL); if (!expand_check(tls_require_ciphers, US"tls_require_ciphers", &expciphers)) return_deinit(US"failed to expand tls_require_ciphers"); if (!(expciphers && *expciphers)) return_deinit(NULL); DEBUG(D_tls) debug_printf("tls_require_ciphers expands to \"%s\"\n", expciphers); rc = gnutls_priority_init(&priority_cache, CS expciphers, &errpos); validate_check_rc(string_sprintf( "gnutls_priority_init(%s) failed at offset %ld, \"%.8s..\"", expciphers, errpos - CS expciphers, errpos)); #undef return_deinit #undef validate_check_rc gnutls_global_deinit(); return NULL; } /************************************************* * Report the library versions. * *************************************************/ /* See a description in tls-openssl.c for an explanation of why this exists. Arguments: a FILE* to print the results to Returns: nothing */ void tls_version_report(FILE *f) { fprintf(f, "Library version: GnuTLS: Compile: %s\n" " Runtime: %s\n", LIBGNUTLS_VERSION, gnutls_check_version(NULL)); } /* End of tls-gnu.c */