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/*
* This file contains prototypes for the public SSL functions.
*
* This Source Code Form is subject to the terms of the Mozilla Public
* License, v. 2.0. If a copy of the MPL was not distributed with this
* file, You can obtain one at http://mozilla.org/MPL/2.0/. */
#ifndef __ssl_h_
#define __ssl_h_
#include "prtypes.h"
#include "prerror.h"
#include "prio.h"
#include "seccomon.h"
#include "cert.h"
#include "keythi.h"
#include "sslt.h" /* public ssl data types */
#if defined(_WIN32) && !defined(IN_LIBSSL) && !defined(NSS_USE_STATIC_LIBS)
#define SSL_IMPORT extern __declspec(dllimport)
#else
#define SSL_IMPORT extern
#endif
SEC_BEGIN_PROTOS
/* constant table enumerating all implemented cipher suites. */
SSL_IMPORT const PRUint16 SSL_ImplementedCiphers[];
/* the same as the above, but is a function */
SSL_IMPORT const PRUint16 *SSL_GetImplementedCiphers(void);
/* number of entries in the above table. */
SSL_IMPORT const PRUint16 SSL_NumImplementedCiphers;
/* the same as the above, but is a function */
SSL_IMPORT PRUint16 SSL_GetNumImplementedCiphers(void);
/* Macro to tell which ciphers in table are SSL2 vs SSL3/TLS. */
#define SSL_IS_SSL2_CIPHER(which) (((which)&0xfff0) == 0xff00)
/*
** Imports fd into SSL, returning a new socket. Copies SSL configuration
** from model.
*/
SSL_IMPORT PRFileDesc *SSL_ImportFD(PRFileDesc *model, PRFileDesc *fd);
/*
** Imports fd into DTLS, returning a new socket. Copies DTLS configuration
** from model.
*/
SSL_IMPORT PRFileDesc *DTLS_ImportFD(PRFileDesc *model, PRFileDesc *fd);
/*
** Enable/disable an ssl mode
**
** SSL_SECURITY:
** enable/disable use of SSL security protocol before connect
**
** SSL_SOCKS:
** enable/disable use of socks before connect
** (No longer supported).
**
** SSL_REQUEST_CERTIFICATE:
** require a certificate during secure connect
*/
/* options */
#define SSL_SECURITY 1 /* (on by default) */
#define SSL_SOCKS 2 /* (off by default) */
#define SSL_REQUEST_CERTIFICATE 3 /* (off by default) */
#define SSL_HANDSHAKE_AS_CLIENT 5 /* force accept to hs as client */
/* (off by default) */
#define SSL_HANDSHAKE_AS_SERVER 6 /* force connect to hs as server */
/* (off by default) */
/* OBSOLETE: SSL v2 is obsolete and may be removed soon. */
#define SSL_ENABLE_SSL2 7 /* enable ssl v2 (off by default) */
/* OBSOLETE: See "SSL Version Range API" below for the replacement and a
** description of the non-obvious semantics of using SSL_ENABLE_SSL3.
*/
#define SSL_ENABLE_SSL3 8 /* enable ssl v3 (on by default) */
#define SSL_NO_CACHE 9 /* don't use the session cache */
/* (off by default) */
#define SSL_REQUIRE_CERTIFICATE 10 /* (SSL_REQUIRE_FIRST_HANDSHAKE */
/* by default) */
#define SSL_ENABLE_FDX 11 /* permit simultaneous read/write */
/* (off by default) */
/* OBSOLETE: SSL v2 compatible hellos are not accepted by some TLS servers
** and cannot negotiate extensions. SSL v2 is obsolete. This option may be
** removed soon.
*/
#define SSL_V2_COMPATIBLE_HELLO 12 /* send v3 client hello in v2 fmt */
/* (off by default) */
/* OBSOLETE: See "SSL Version Range API" below for the replacement and a
** description of the non-obvious semantics of using SSL_ENABLE_TLS.
*/
#define SSL_ENABLE_TLS 13 /* enable TLS (on by default) */
#define SSL_ROLLBACK_DETECTION 14 /* for compatibility, default: on */
#define SSL_NO_STEP_DOWN 15 /* (unsupported, deprecated, off) */
#define SSL_BYPASS_PKCS11 16 /* (unsupported, deprecated, off) */
#define SSL_NO_LOCKS 17 /* Don't use locks for protection */
#define SSL_ENABLE_SESSION_TICKETS 18 /* Enable TLS SessionTicket */
/* extension (off by default) */
#define SSL_ENABLE_DEFLATE 19 /* (unsupported, deprecated, off) */
#define SSL_ENABLE_RENEGOTIATION 20 /* Values below (default: never) */
#define SSL_REQUIRE_SAFE_NEGOTIATION 21 /* Peer must send Signaling */
/* Cipher Suite Value (SCSV) or */
/* Renegotiation Info (RI) */
/* extension in ALL handshakes. */
/* default: off */
#define SSL_ENABLE_FALSE_START 22 /* Enable SSL false start (off by */
/* default, applies only to */
/* clients). False start is a */
/* mode where an SSL client will start sending application data before
* verifying the server's Finished message. This means that we could end up
* sending data to an imposter. However, the data will be encrypted and
* only the true server can derive the session key. Thus, so long as the
* cipher isn't broken this is safe. The advantage of false start is that
* it saves a round trip for client-speaks-first protocols when performing a
* full handshake.
*
* In addition to enabling this option, the application must register a
* callback using the SSL_SetCanFalseStartCallback function.
*/
/* For SSL 3.0 and TLS 1.0, by default we prevent chosen plaintext attacks
* on SSL CBC mode cipher suites (see RFC 4346 Section F.3) by splitting
* non-empty application_data records into two records; the first record has
* only the first byte of plaintext, and the second has the rest.
*
* This only prevents the attack in the sending direction; the connection may
* still be vulnerable to such attacks if the peer does not implement a similar
* countermeasure.
*
* This protection mechanism is on by default; the default can be overridden by
* setting NSS_SSL_CBC_RANDOM_IV=0 in the environment prior to execution,
* and/or by the application setting the option SSL_CBC_RANDOM_IV to PR_FALSE.
*
* The per-record IV in TLS 1.1 and later adds one block of overhead per
* record, whereas this hack will add at least two blocks of overhead per
* record, so TLS 1.1+ will always be more efficient.
*
* Other implementations (e.g. some versions of OpenSSL, in some
* configurations) prevent the same attack by prepending an empty
* application_data record to every application_data record they send; we do
* not do that because some implementations cannot handle empty
* application_data records. Also, we only split application_data records and
* not other types of records, because some implementations will not accept
* fragmented records of some other types (e.g. some versions of NSS do not
* accept fragmented alerts).
*/
#define SSL_CBC_RANDOM_IV 23
#define SSL_ENABLE_OCSP_STAPLING 24 /* Request OCSP stapling (client) */
/* SSL_ENABLE_NPN is defunct and defaults to false.
* Using this option will not have any effect but won't produce an error. */
#define SSL_ENABLE_NPN 25
/* SSL_ENABLE_ALPN controls whether the ALPN extension is enabled for the
* initial handshake when application layer protocol negotiation is used.
* SSL_SetNextProtoNego or SSL_SetNextProtoCallback can be used to control
* the application layer protocol negotiation;
* ALPN is not negotiated for renegotiation handshakes, even though the ALPN
* specification defines a way to use ALPN during renegotiations.
* SSL_ENABLE_ALPN is currently enabled by default, but this may change in
* future versions.
*/
#define SSL_ENABLE_ALPN 26
/* SSL_REUSE_SERVER_ECDHE_KEY controls whether the ECDHE server key is
* reused for multiple handshakes or generated each time.
* SSL_REUSE_SERVER_ECDHE_KEY is currently disabled by default.
* This socket option is for ECDHE, only. It is unrelated to DHE.
*/
#define SSL_REUSE_SERVER_ECDHE_KEY 27
#define SSL_ENABLE_FALLBACK_SCSV 28 /* Send fallback SCSV in \
* handshakes. */
/* SSL_ENABLE_SERVER_DHE controls whether DHE is enabled for the server socket.
*/
#define SSL_ENABLE_SERVER_DHE 29
/* Use draft-ietf-tls-session-hash. Controls whether we offer the
* extended_master_secret extension which, when accepted, hashes
* the handshake transcript into the master secret. This option is
* enabled by default.
*/
#define SSL_ENABLE_EXTENDED_MASTER_SECRET 30
/* Request Signed Certificate Timestamps via TLS extension (client) */
#define SSL_ENABLE_SIGNED_CERT_TIMESTAMPS 31
/* Ordinarily, when negotiating a TLS_DHE_* cipher suite the server picks the
* group. draft-ietf-tls-negotiated-ff-dhe changes this to use supported_groups
* (formerly supported_curves) to signal which pre-defined groups are OK.
*
* This option causes an NSS client to use this extension and demand that those
* groups be used. A client will signal any enabled DHE groups in the
* supported_groups extension and reject groups that don't match what it has
* enabled. A server will only negotiate TLS_DHE_* cipher suites if the
* client includes the extension.
*
* See SSL_NamedGroupConfig() for how to control which groups are enabled.
*
* This option cannot be enabled if NSS is not compiled with ECC support.
*/
#define SSL_REQUIRE_DH_NAMED_GROUPS 32
/* Allow 0-RTT data (for TLS 1.3).
*
* When this option is set, the server's session tickets will contain
* a flag indicating that it accepts 0-RTT. When resuming such a
* session, PR_Write() on the client will be allowed immediately after
* starting the handshake and PR_Read() on the server will be allowed
* on the server to read that data. Calls to
* SSL_GetPreliminaryChannelInfo() and SSL_GetNextProto()
* can be made used during this period to learn about the channel
* parameters.
*
* The transition between the 0-RTT and 1-RTT modes is marked by the
* handshake callback. However, it is possible to force the completion
* of the handshake (and cause the handshake callback to be called)
* prior to reading all 0-RTT data using SSL_ForceHandshake(). To
* ensure that all early data is read before the handshake callback, any
* time that SSL_ForceHandshake() returns a PR_WOULD_BLOCK_ERROR, use
* PR_Read() to read all available data. If PR_Read() is called
* multiple times, this will result in the handshake completing, but the
* handshake callback will occur after early data has all been read.
*
* WARNING: 0-RTT data has different anti-replay and PFS properties than
* the rest of the TLS data. See [draft-ietf-tls-tls13; Section 8]
* for more details.
*
* Note: when DTLS 1.3 is in use, any 0-RTT data received after EndOfEarlyData
* (e.g., because of reordering) is discarded.
*/
#define SSL_ENABLE_0RTT_DATA 33
/* Sets a limit to the size of encrypted records (see
* draft-ietf-tls-record-limit). This is the value that is advertised to peers,
* not a limit on the size of records that will be created. Setting this value
* reduces the size of records that will be received (not sent).
*
* This limit applies to the plaintext, but the records that appear on the wire
* will be bigger. This doesn't include record headers, IVs, block cipher
* padding, and authentication tags or MACs.
*
* NSS always advertises the record size limit extension. If this option is not
* set, the extension will contain the maximum allowed size for the selected TLS
* version (currently this is 16384 or 2^14 for TLS 1.2 and lower and 16385 for
* TLS 1.3).
*
* By default, NSS creates records that are the maximum size possible, using all
* the data that was written by the application. Writes larger than the maximum
* are split into maximum sized records, and any remainder (unless
* SSL_CBC_RANDOM_IV is enabled and active). If a peer advertises a record size
* limit then that value is used instead.
*/
#define SSL_RECORD_SIZE_LIMIT 34
/* Enables TLS 1.3 compatibility mode. In this mode, the client includes a fake
* session ID in the handshake and sends a ChangeCipherSpec. A server will
* always use the setting chosen by the client, so the value of this option has
* no effect for a server. This setting is ignored for DTLS. */
#define SSL_ENABLE_TLS13_COMPAT_MODE 35
/* Enables the sending of DTLS records using the short (two octet) record
* header. Only do this if there are 2^10 or fewer packets in flight at a time;
* using this with a larger number of packets in flight could mean that packets
* are dropped if there is reordering.
*
* This applies to TLS 1.3 only. This is not a parameter that is negotiated
* during the TLS handshake. Unlike other socket options, this option can be
* changed after a handshake is complete.
*/
#define SSL_ENABLE_DTLS_SHORT_HEADER 36
/*
* Enables the processing of the downgrade sentinel that can be added to the
* ServerHello.random by a server that supports Section 4.1.3 of TLS 1.3
* [RFC8446]. This sentinel will always be generated by a server that
* negotiates a version lower than its maximum, this only controls whether a
* client will treat receipt of a value that indicates a downgrade as an error.
*/
#define SSL_ENABLE_HELLO_DOWNGRADE_CHECK 37
/* Enables the SSLv2-compatible ClientHello for servers. NSS does not support
* SSLv2 and will never send an SSLv2-compatible ClientHello as a client. An
* NSS server with this option enabled will accept a ClientHello that is
* v2-compatible as defined in Appendix E.1 of RFC 6101.
*
* This is disabled by default and will be removed in a future version. */
#define SSL_ENABLE_V2_COMPATIBLE_HELLO 38
/* Enables the post-handshake authentication in TLS 1.3. If it is set
* to PR_TRUE, the client will send the "post_handshake_auth"
* extension to indicate that it will process CertificateRequest
* messages after handshake.
*
* This option applies only to clients. For a server, the
* SSL_SendCertificateRequest can be used to request post-handshake
* authentication.
*/
#define SSL_ENABLE_POST_HANDSHAKE_AUTH 39
/* Enables the delegated credentials extension (draft-ietf-tls-subcerts). When
* enabled, a client that supports TLS 1.3 will indicate willingness to
* negotiate a delegated credential (DC). Note that client-delegated credentials
* are not currently supported.
*
* If support is indicated, the peer may use a DC to authenticate itself. The DC
* is sent as an extension to the peer's end-entity certificate; the end-entity
* certificate is used to verify the DC, which in turn is used to verify the
* handshake. DCs effectively extend the certificate chain by one, but only
* within the context of TLS. Once issued, DCs can't be revoked; in order to
* mitigate the damage in case the secret key is compromised, the DC is only
* valid for a short time (days, hours, or even minutes).
*
* This library implements draft-07 of the protocol spec.
*/
#define SSL_ENABLE_DELEGATED_CREDENTIALS 40
/* Causes TLS (>=1.3) to suppress the EndOfEarlyData message in stream mode.
*
* This is not advisable in general, but the message only exists to delineate
* early data in a streamed connection. DTLS does not use this message as a
* result. The integration of TLS with QUIC, which uses a record/packet
* protection layer that is unreliable, also does not use this message.
*
* On the server, this requires that SSL_RecordLayerData be used.
* EndOfEarlyData is otherwise needed to drive key changes. Additionally,
* servers that use this API must check that handshake messages (Certificate,
* CertificateVerify, and Finished in particular) are only received in epoch 2
* (Handshake). SSL_RecordLayerData will accept these handshake messages if
* they are passed as epoch 1 (Early Data) in a single call.
*
* Using this option will cause connections to fail if early data is attempted
* and the peer expects this message.
*/
#define SSL_SUPPRESS_END_OF_EARLY_DATA 41
/* Enables TLS GREASE (specified in RFC8701, following Chrome 55 implementation
* decisions).
*
* If enabled and the client's ss->vrange.max >= SSL_LIBRARY_VERSION_TLS_1_3 or
* the server's ss->version >= SSL_LIBRARY_VERSION_TLS_1_3, this adds random
* GREASE values to:
* - ClientHello (Client):
* - A cipher_suite value to the cipher_suites field.
* - An empty and a 1B zeroed payload extension.
* - A named group value to the supported_groups extension and a
* KeyShareEntry value for the added named group.
* - A signature algorithm value to the signature_algorithms extension.
* - A version value to the supported_versions extension.
* - A PskKeyExchangeMode value to the psk_key_exchange_modes extension.
* - A alpn value to the application_layer_protocol_negotiation extension.
*
* - CertificateRequest (Server):
* - An empty extension.
* - A signature algorithm value to the signature_algorithms extension.
*
* - NewSessionTicket (Server):
* - An empty extension.
*
* GREASE values MUST nerver be negotiated but ignored.
*/
#define SSL_ENABLE_GREASE 42
/* Enables TLS ClientHello Extension Permutation.
*
* On a TLS ClientHello all extensions but the Psk extension
* (which MUST be last) will be sent in randomly shuffeld order.
*/
#define SSL_ENABLE_CH_EXTENSION_PERMUTATION 43
#ifdef SSL_DEPRECATED_FUNCTION
/* Old deprecated function names */
SSL_IMPORT SECStatus SSL_Enable(PRFileDesc *fd, int option, PRIntn on);
SSL_IMPORT SECStatus SSL_EnableDefault(int option, PRIntn on);
#endif
/* Set (and get) options for sockets and defaults for newly created sockets.
*
* While the |val| parameter of these methods is PRIntn, options only support
* two values by default: PR_TRUE or PR_FALSE. The documentation of specific
* options will explain if other values are permitted.
*/
SSL_IMPORT SECStatus SSL_OptionSet(PRFileDesc *fd, PRInt32 option, PRIntn val);
SSL_IMPORT SECStatus SSL_OptionGet(PRFileDesc *fd, PRInt32 option, PRIntn *val);
SSL_IMPORT SECStatus SSL_OptionSetDefault(PRInt32 option, PRIntn val);
SSL_IMPORT SECStatus SSL_OptionGetDefault(PRInt32 option, PRIntn *val);
SSL_IMPORT SECStatus SSL_CertDBHandleSet(PRFileDesc *fd, CERTCertDBHandle *dbHandle);
/* SSLNextProtoCallback is called during the handshake for the server, when an
* Application-Layer Protocol Negotiation (ALPN) extension has been received
* from the client. |protos| and |protosLen| define a buffer which contains the
* client's advertisement.
* |protoOut| is a buffer provided by the caller, of length 255 (the maximum
* allowed by the protocol). On successful return, the protocol to be announced
* to the server will be in |protoOut| and its length in |*protoOutLen|.
*
* The callback must return SECFailure or SECSuccess (not SECWouldBlock).
*/
typedef SECStatus(PR_CALLBACK *SSLNextProtoCallback)(
void *arg,
PRFileDesc *fd,
const unsigned char *protos,
unsigned int protosLen,
unsigned char *protoOut,
unsigned int *protoOutLen,
unsigned int protoMaxOut);
/* SSL_SetNextProtoCallback sets a callback function to handle ALPN Negotiation.
* It causes a client to advertise ALPN. */
SSL_IMPORT SECStatus SSL_SetNextProtoCallback(PRFileDesc *fd,
SSLNextProtoCallback callback,
void *arg);
/* SSL_SetNextProtoNego can be used as an alternative to
* SSL_SetNextProtoCallback.
*
* Using this function allows client and server to transparently support ALPN.
* The same set of protocols will be advertised via ALPN and, if the server
* uses ALPN to select a protocol, SSL_GetNextProto will return
* SSL_NEXT_PROTO_SELECTED as the state.
*
* Because the predecessor to ALPN, NPN, used the first protocol as the fallback
* protocol, when sending an ALPN extension, the first protocol is moved to the
* end of the list. This indicates that the fallback protocol is the least
* preferred. The other protocols should be in preference order.
*
* The supported protocols are specified in |data| in wire-format (8-bit
* length-prefixed). For example: "\010http/1.1\006spdy/2".
*
* An empty value (i.e., where |length| is 0 and |data| is any value,
* including NULL) forcibly disables ALPN. In this mode, the server will
* reject any ClientHello that includes the ALPN extension.
*
* Calling this function overrides the callback previously set by
* SSL_SetNextProtoCallback. */
SSL_IMPORT SECStatus SSL_SetNextProtoNego(PRFileDesc *fd,
const unsigned char *data,
unsigned int length);
typedef enum SSLNextProtoState {
SSL_NEXT_PROTO_NO_SUPPORT = 0, /* No peer support */
SSL_NEXT_PROTO_NEGOTIATED = 1, /* Mutual agreement */
SSL_NEXT_PROTO_NO_OVERLAP = 2, /* No protocol overlap found */
SSL_NEXT_PROTO_SELECTED = 3, /* Server selected proto (ALPN) */
SSL_NEXT_PROTO_EARLY_VALUE = 4 /* We are in 0-RTT using this value. */
} SSLNextProtoState;
/* SSL_GetNextProto can be used in the HandshakeCallback or any time after
* a handshake to retrieve the result of the Next Protocol negotiation.
*
* The length of the negotiated protocol, if any, is written into *bufLen.
* If the negotiated protocol is longer than bufLenMax, then SECFailure is
* returned. Otherwise, the negotiated protocol, if any, is written into buf,
* and SECSuccess is returned. */
SSL_IMPORT SECStatus SSL_GetNextProto(PRFileDesc *fd,
SSLNextProtoState *state,
unsigned char *buf,
unsigned int *bufLen,
unsigned int bufLenMax);
/*
** Control ciphers that SSL uses. If on is non-zero then the named cipher
** is enabled, otherwise it is disabled.
** The "cipher" values are defined in sslproto.h (the SSL_EN_* values).
** EnableCipher records user preferences.
** SetPolicy sets the policy according to the policy module.
*/
#ifdef SSL_DEPRECATED_FUNCTION
/* Old deprecated function names */
SSL_IMPORT SECStatus SSL_EnableCipher(long which, PRBool enabled);
SSL_IMPORT SECStatus SSL_SetPolicy(long which, int policy);
#endif
/* New function names */
SSL_IMPORT SECStatus SSL_CipherPrefSet(PRFileDesc *fd, PRInt32 cipher, PRBool enabled);
SSL_IMPORT SECStatus SSL_CipherPrefGet(PRFileDesc *fd, PRInt32 cipher, PRBool *enabled);
SSL_IMPORT SECStatus SSL_CipherPrefSetDefault(PRInt32 cipher, PRBool enabled);
SSL_IMPORT SECStatus SSL_CipherPrefGetDefault(PRInt32 cipher, PRBool *enabled);
SSL_IMPORT SECStatus SSL_CipherPolicySet(PRInt32 cipher, PRInt32 policy);
SSL_IMPORT SECStatus SSL_CipherPolicyGet(PRInt32 cipher, PRInt32 *policy);
/*
** Control for TLS signature schemes for TLS 1.2 and 1.3.
**
** This governs what signature schemes (or algorithms) are sent by a client in
** the signature_algorithms extension. A client will not accept a signature
** from a server unless it uses an enabled algorithm.
**
** This also governs what the server sends in the supported_signature_algorithms
** field of a CertificateRequest.
**
** This changes what the server uses to sign ServerKeyExchange and
** CertificateVerify messages. An endpoint uses the first entry from this list
** that is compatible with both its certificate and its peer's supported
** values.
**
** This configuration affects TLS 1.2, but the combination of EC group and hash
** algorithm is interpreted loosely to be compatible with other implementations.
** For TLS 1.2, NSS will ignore the curve group when generating or verifying
** ECDSA signatures. For example, a P-384 ECDSA certificate is used with
** SHA-256 if ssl_sig_ecdsa_secp256r1_sha256 is enabled.
**
** Omitting SHA-256 schemes from this list might be foolish. Support is
** mandatory in TLS 1.2 and 1.3 and there might be interoperability issues.
*/
SSL_IMPORT SECStatus SSL_SignatureSchemePrefSet(
PRFileDesc *fd, const SSLSignatureScheme *schemes, unsigned int count);
/* Deprecated, use SSL_SignatureSchemePrefSet() instead. */
SSL_IMPORT SECStatus SSL_SignaturePrefSet(
PRFileDesc *fd, const SSLSignatureAndHashAlg *algorithms,
unsigned int count);
/*
** Get the currently configured signature schemes.
**
** The schemes are written to |schemes| but not if there are more than
** |maxCount| values configured. The number of schemes that are in use are
** written to |count|. This fails if |maxCount| is insufficiently large.
*/
SSL_IMPORT SECStatus SSL_SignatureSchemePrefGet(
PRFileDesc *fd, SSLSignatureScheme *algorithms, unsigned int *count,
unsigned int maxCount);
/* Deprecated, use SSL_SignatureSchemePrefGet() instead. */
SSL_IMPORT SECStatus SSL_SignaturePrefGet(
PRFileDesc *fd, SSLSignatureAndHashAlg *algorithms, unsigned int *count,
unsigned int maxCount);
/*
** Returns the maximum number of signature algorithms that are supported and
** can be set or retrieved using SSL_SignatureSchemePrefSet or
** SSL_SignatureSchemePrefGet.
*/
SSL_IMPORT unsigned int SSL_SignatureMaxCount(void);
/*
** Define custom priorities for EC and FF groups used in DH key exchange and EC
** groups for ECDSA. This only changes the order of enabled lists (and thus
** their priorities) and enables all groups in |groups| while disabling all other
** groups.
*/
SSL_IMPORT SECStatus SSL_NamedGroupConfig(PRFileDesc *fd,
const SSLNamedGroup *groups,
unsigned int num_groups);
/*
** Configure the socket to configure additional key shares. Normally when a TLS
** 1.3 ClientHello is sent, just one key share is included using the first
** preference group (as set by SSL_NamedGroupConfig). If the server decides to
** pick a different group for key exchange, it is forced to send a
** HelloRetryRequest, which adds an entire round trip of latency.
**
** This function can be used to configure libssl to generate additional key
** shares when sending a TLS 1.3 ClientHello. If |count| is set to a non-zero
** value, then additional key shares are generated. Shares are added in the
** preference order set in SSL_NamedGroupConfig. |count| can be set to any
** value; NSS limits the number of shares to the number of supported groups.
*/
SSL_IMPORT SECStatus SSL_SendAdditionalKeyShares(PRFileDesc *fd,
unsigned int count);
/* Deprecated: use SSL_NamedGroupConfig() instead.
** SSL_DHEGroupPrefSet is used to configure the set of allowed/enabled DHE group
** parameters that can be used by NSS for the given server socket.
** The first item in the array is used as the default group, if no other
** selection criteria can be used by NSS.
** The set is provided as an array of identifiers as defined by SSLDHEGroupType.
** If more than one group identifier is provided, NSS will select the one to use.
** For example, a TLS extension sent by the client might indicate a preference.
*/
SSL_IMPORT SECStatus SSL_DHEGroupPrefSet(PRFileDesc *fd,
const SSLDHEGroupType *groups,
PRUint16 num_groups);
/* Enable the use of a DHE group that's smaller than the library default,
** for backwards compatibility reasons. The DH parameters will be created
** at the time this function is called, which might take a very long time.
** The function will block until generation is completed.
** The intention is to enforce that fresh and safe parameters are generated
** each time a process is started.
** At the time this API was initially implemented, the API will enable the
** use of 1024 bit DHE parameters. This value might get increased in future
** versions of NSS.
**
** It is allowed to call this API will a NULL value for parameter fd,
** which will prepare the global parameters that NSS will reuse for the remainder
** of the process lifetime. This can be used early after startup of a process,
** to avoid a delay when handling incoming client connections.
** This preparation with a NULL for parameter fd will NOT enable the weak group
** on sockets. The function needs to be called again for every socket that
** should use the weak group.
**
** It is allowed to use this API in combination with the SSL_NamedGroupConfig API.
** If both APIs have been called, the weakest group will be used, unless it is
** certain that the client supports larger group parameters. The weak group will
** be used as the default group for TLS <= 1.2, overriding the preference for
** the first group potentially set with a call to SSL_NamedGroupConfig.
*/
SSL_IMPORT SECStatus SSL_EnableWeakDHEPrimeGroup(PRFileDesc *fd, PRBool enabled);
/* SSL Version Range API
**
** This API should be used to control SSL 3.0 & TLS support instead of the
** older SSL_Option* API; however, the SSL_Option* API MUST still be used to
** control SSL 2.0 support. In this version of libssl, SSL 3.0 and TLS 1.0 are
** enabled by default. Future versions of libssl may change which versions of
** the protocol are enabled by default.
**
** The SSLProtocolVariant enum indicates whether the protocol is of type
** stream or datagram. This must be provided to the functions that do not
** take an fd. Functions which take an fd will get the variant from the fd,
** which is typed.
**
** Using the new version range API in conjunction with the older
** SSL_OptionSet-based API for controlling the enabled protocol versions may
** cause unexpected results. Going forward, we guarantee only the following:
**
** SSL_OptionGet(SSL_ENABLE_TLS) will return PR_TRUE if *ANY* versions of TLS
** are enabled.
**
** SSL_OptionSet(SSL_ENABLE_TLS, PR_FALSE) will disable *ALL* versions of TLS,
** including TLS 1.0 and later.
**
** The above two properties provide compatibility for applications that use
** SSL_OptionSet to implement the insecure fallback from TLS 1.x to SSL 3.0.
**
** SSL_OptionSet(SSL_ENABLE_TLS, PR_TRUE) will enable TLS 1.0, and may also
** enable some later versions of TLS, if it is necessary to do so in order to
** keep the set of enabled versions contiguous. For example, if TLS 1.2 is
** enabled, then after SSL_OptionSet(SSL_ENABLE_TLS, PR_TRUE), TLS 1.0,
** TLS 1.1, and TLS 1.2 will be enabled, and the call will have no effect on
** whether SSL 3.0 is enabled. If no later versions of TLS are enabled at the
** time SSL_OptionSet(SSL_ENABLE_TLS, PR_TRUE) is called, then no later
** versions of TLS will be enabled by the call.
**
** SSL_OptionSet(SSL_ENABLE_SSL3, PR_FALSE) will disable SSL 3.0, and will not
** change the set of TLS versions that are enabled.
**
** SSL_OptionSet(SSL_ENABLE_SSL3, PR_TRUE) will enable SSL 3.0, and may also
** enable some versions of TLS if TLS 1.1 or later is enabled at the time of
** the call, the same way SSL_OptionSet(SSL_ENABLE_TLS, PR_TRUE) works, in
** order to keep the set of enabled versions contiguous.
*/
/* Returns, in |*vrange|, the range of SSL3/TLS versions supported for the
** given protocol variant by the version of libssl linked-to at runtime.
*/
SSL_IMPORT SECStatus SSL_VersionRangeGetSupported(
SSLProtocolVariant protocolVariant, SSLVersionRange *vrange);
/* Returns, in |*vrange|, the range of SSL3/TLS versions enabled by default
** for the given protocol variant.
*/
SSL_IMPORT SECStatus SSL_VersionRangeGetDefault(
SSLProtocolVariant protocolVariant, SSLVersionRange *vrange);
/* Sets the range of enabled-by-default SSL3/TLS versions for the given
** protocol variant to |*vrange|.
*/
SSL_IMPORT SECStatus SSL_VersionRangeSetDefault(
SSLProtocolVariant protocolVariant, const SSLVersionRange *vrange);
/* Returns, in |*vrange|, the range of enabled SSL3/TLS versions for |fd|. */
SSL_IMPORT SECStatus SSL_VersionRangeGet(PRFileDesc *fd,
SSLVersionRange *vrange);
/* Sets the range of enabled SSL3/TLS versions for |fd| to |*vrange|. */
SSL_IMPORT SECStatus SSL_VersionRangeSet(PRFileDesc *fd,
const SSLVersionRange *vrange);
/* Sets the version to check the server random against for the
* fallback check defined in [draft-ietf-tls-tls13-11 Section 6.3.1.1].
* This function is provided to allow for detection of forced downgrade
* attacks against client-side reconnect-and-fallback outside of TLS
* by setting |version| to be that of the original connection, rather
* than that of the new connection.
*
* The default, which can also be enabled by setting |version| to
* zero, is just to check against the max version in the
* version range (see SSL_VersionRangeSet). */
SSL_IMPORT SECStatus SSL_SetDowngradeCheckVersion(PRFileDesc *fd,
PRUint16 version);
/* Values for "policy" argument to SSL_CipherPolicySet */
/* Values returned by SSL_CipherPolicyGet. */
#define SSL_NOT_ALLOWED 0 /* or invalid or unimplemented */
#define SSL_ALLOWED 1
#define SSL_RESTRICTED 2 /* only with "Step-Up" certs. */
/* Values for "on" with SSL_REQUIRE_CERTIFICATE. */
#define SSL_REQUIRE_NEVER ((PRBool)0)
#define SSL_REQUIRE_ALWAYS ((PRBool)1)
#define SSL_REQUIRE_FIRST_HANDSHAKE ((PRBool)2)
#define SSL_REQUIRE_NO_ERROR ((PRBool)3)
/* Values for "on" with SSL_ENABLE_RENEGOTIATION */
/* Never renegotiate at all. */
#define SSL_RENEGOTIATE_NEVER ((PRBool)0)
/* Renegotiate without restriction, whether or not the peer's client hello */
/* bears the renegotiation info extension. Vulnerable, as in the past. */
#define SSL_RENEGOTIATE_UNRESTRICTED ((PRBool)1)
/* Only renegotiate if the peer's hello bears the TLS renegotiation_info */
/* extension. This is safe renegotiation. */
#define SSL_RENEGOTIATE_REQUIRES_XTN ((PRBool)2)
/* Disallow unsafe renegotiation in server sockets only, but allow clients */
/* to continue to renegotiate with vulnerable servers. */
/* This value should only be used during the transition period when few */
/* servers have been upgraded. */
#define SSL_RENEGOTIATE_TRANSITIONAL ((PRBool)3)
/*
** Reset the handshake state for fd. This will make the complete SSL
** handshake protocol execute from the ground up on the next i/o
** operation.
*/
SSL_IMPORT SECStatus SSL_ResetHandshake(PRFileDesc *fd, PRBool asServer);
/*
** Force the handshake for fd to complete immediately. This blocks until
** the complete SSL handshake protocol is finished.
*/
SSL_IMPORT SECStatus SSL_ForceHandshake(PRFileDesc *fd);
/*
** Same as above, but with an I/O timeout.
*/
SSL_IMPORT SECStatus SSL_ForceHandshakeWithTimeout(PRFileDesc *fd,
PRIntervalTime timeout);
/*
** Query security status of socket. *on is set to one if security is
** enabled. *keySize will contain the stream key size used. *issuer will
** contain the RFC1485 verison of the name of the issuer of the
** certificate at the other end of the connection. For a client, this is
** the issuer of the server's certificate; for a server, this is the
** issuer of the client's certificate (if any). Subject is the subject of
** the other end's certificate. The pointers can be zero if the desired
** data is not needed. All strings returned by this function are owned
** by the caller, and need to be freed with PORT_Free.
*/
SSL_IMPORT SECStatus SSL_SecurityStatus(PRFileDesc *fd, int *on, char **cipher,
int *keySize, int *secretKeySize,
char **issuer, char **subject);
/* Values for "on" */
#define SSL_SECURITY_STATUS_NOOPT -1
#define SSL_SECURITY_STATUS_OFF 0
#define SSL_SECURITY_STATUS_ON_HIGH 1
#define SSL_SECURITY_STATUS_ON_LOW 2
#define SSL_SECURITY_STATUS_FORTEZZA 3 /* NO LONGER SUPPORTED */
/*
** Return the certificate for our SSL peer. If the client calls this
** it will always return the server's certificate. If the server calls
** this, it may return NULL if client authentication is not enabled or
** if the client had no certificate when asked.
** "fd" the socket "file" descriptor
*/
SSL_IMPORT CERTCertificate *SSL_PeerCertificate(PRFileDesc *fd);
/*
** Return the certificates presented by the SSL peer. If the SSL peer
** did not present certificates, return NULL with the
** SSL_ERROR_NO_CERTIFICATE error. On failure, return NULL with an error
** code other than SSL_ERROR_NO_CERTIFICATE.
** "fd" the socket "file" descriptor
*/
SSL_IMPORT CERTCertList *SSL_PeerCertificateChain(PRFileDesc *fd);
/* SSL_PeerStapledOCSPResponses returns the OCSP responses that were provided
* by the TLS server. The return value is a pointer to an internal SECItemArray
* that contains the returned OCSP responses; it is only valid until the
* callback function that calls SSL_PeerStapledOCSPResponses returns.
*
* If no OCSP responses were given by the server then the result will be empty.
* If there was an error, then the result will be NULL.
*
* You must set the SSL_ENABLE_OCSP_STAPLING option to enable OCSP stapling.
* to be provided by a server.
*
* libssl does not do any validation of the OCSP response itself; the
* authenticate certificate hook is responsible for doing so. The default
* authenticate certificate hook, SSL_AuthCertificate, does not implement
* any OCSP stapling funtionality, but this may change in future versions.
*/
SSL_IMPORT const SECItemArray *SSL_PeerStapledOCSPResponses(PRFileDesc *fd);
/* SSL_PeerSignedCertTimestamps returns the signed_certificate_timestamp
* extension data provided by the TLS server. The return value is a pointer
* to an internal SECItem that contains the returned response (as a serialized
* SignedCertificateTimestampList, see RFC 6962). The returned pointer is only
* valid until the callback function that calls SSL_PeerSignedCertTimestamps
* (e.g. the authenticate certificate hook, or the handshake callback) returns.
*
* If no Signed Certificate Timestamps were given by the server then the result
* will be empty. If there was an error, then the result will be NULL.
*
* You must set the SSL_ENABLE_SIGNED_CERT_TIMESTAMPS option to indicate support
* for Signed Certificate Timestamps to a server.
*
* libssl does not do any parsing or validation of the response itself.
*/
SSL_IMPORT const SECItem *SSL_PeerSignedCertTimestamps(PRFileDesc *fd);
/* SSL_SetStapledOCSPResponses stores an array of one or multiple OCSP responses
* in the fd's data, which may be sent as part of a server side cert_status
* handshake message. Parameter |responses| is for the server certificate of
* the key exchange type |kea|.
* The function will duplicate the responses array.
*
* Deprecated: see SSL_ConfigSecureServer for details.
*/
SSL_IMPORT SECStatus
SSL_SetStapledOCSPResponses(PRFileDesc *fd, const SECItemArray *responses,
SSLKEAType kea);
/*
* SSL_SetSignedCertTimestamps stores serialized signed_certificate_timestamp
* extension data in the fd. The signed_certificate_timestamp data is sent
* during the handshake (if requested by the client). Parameter |scts|
* is for the server certificate of the key exchange type |kea|.
* The function will duplicate the provided data item. To clear previously
* set data for a given key exchange type |kea|, pass NULL to |scts|.
*
* Deprecated: see SSL_ConfigSecureServer for details.
*/
SSL_IMPORT SECStatus
SSL_SetSignedCertTimestamps(PRFileDesc *fd, const SECItem *scts,
SSLKEAType kea);
/*
** Authenticate certificate hook. Called when a certificate comes in
** (because of SSL_REQUIRE_CERTIFICATE in SSL_Enable) to authenticate the
** certificate.
**
** The authenticate certificate hook must return SECSuccess to indicate the
** certificate is valid, SECFailure to indicate the certificate is invalid,
** or SECWouldBlock if the application will authenticate the certificate
** asynchronously. SECWouldBlock is only supported for non-blocking sockets.
**
** If the authenticate certificate hook returns SECFailure, then the bad cert
** hook will be called. The bad cert handler is NEVER called if the
** authenticate certificate hook returns SECWouldBlock. If the application
** needs to handle and/or override a bad cert, it should do so before it
** calls SSL_AuthCertificateComplete (modifying the error it passes to
** SSL_AuthCertificateComplete as needed).
**
** See the documentation for SSL_AuthCertificateComplete for more information
** about the asynchronous behavior that occurs when the authenticate
** certificate hook returns SECWouldBlock.
**
** RFC 6066 says that clients should send the bad_certificate_status_response
** alert when they encounter an error processing the stapled OCSP response.
** libssl does not provide a way for the authenticate certificate hook to
** indicate that an OCSP error (SEC_ERROR_OCSP_*) that it returns is an error
** in the stapled OCSP response or an error in some other OCSP response.
** Further, NSS does not provide a convenient way to control or determine
** which OCSP response(s) were used to validate a certificate chain.
** Consequently, the current version of libssl does not ever send the
** bad_certificate_status_response alert. This may change in future releases.
*/
typedef SECStatus(PR_CALLBACK *SSLAuthCertificate)(void *arg, PRFileDesc *fd,
PRBool checkSig,
PRBool isServer);
SSL_IMPORT SECStatus SSL_AuthCertificateHook(PRFileDesc *fd,
SSLAuthCertificate f,
void *arg);
/* An implementation of the certificate authentication hook */
SSL_IMPORT SECStatus SSL_AuthCertificate(void *arg, PRFileDesc *fd,
PRBool checkSig, PRBool isServer);
/*
* Prototype for SSL callback to get client auth data from the application.
* arg - application passed argument
* caNames - pointer to distinguished names of CAs that the server likes
* pRetCert - pointer to pointer to cert, for return of cert
* pRetKey - pointer to key pointer, for return of key
* Return value can be one of {SECSuccess, SECFailure, SECWouldBlock}
*
* If SECSuccess, pRetCert and pRetKey should be set to the selected
* client cert and private key respectively. If SECFailure or SECWouldBlock
* they should not be changed.
*
* Ownership of pRetCert and pRetKey passes to NSS. The application must not
* mutate or free the structures after passing them to NSS.
*
* Returning SECWouldBlock will block the handshake until SSL_ClientCertCallbackComplete
* is called. Note that references to *caNames should not be kept after SSLGetClientAuthData
* returns. Instead, take a copy of the data.
*
* See also the comments for SSL_ClientCertCallbackComplete.
*/
typedef SECStatus(PR_CALLBACK *SSLGetClientAuthData)(void *arg,
PRFileDesc *fd,
CERTDistNames *caNames,
CERTCertificate **pRetCert, /*return */
SECKEYPrivateKey **pRetKey); /* return */
/*
* Set the client side callback for SSL to retrieve user's private key
* and certificate.
* fd - the file descriptor for the connection in question
* f - the application's callback that delivers the key and cert
* a - application specific data
*/
SSL_IMPORT SECStatus SSL_GetClientAuthDataHook(PRFileDesc *fd,
SSLGetClientAuthData f, void *a);
/*
** SNI extension processing callback function.
** It is called when SSL socket receives SNI extension in ClientHello message.
** Upon this callback invocation, application is responsible to reconfigure the
** socket with the data for a particular server name.
** There are three potential outcomes of this function invocation:
** * application does not recognize the name or the type and wants the
** "unrecognized_name" alert be sent to the client. In this case the callback
** function must return SSL_SNI_SEND_ALERT status.
** * application does not recognize the name, but wants to continue with
** the handshake using the current socket configuration. In this case,
** no socket reconfiguration is needed and the function should return
** SSL_SNI_CURRENT_CONFIG_IS_USED.
** * application recognizes the name and reconfigures the socket with
** appropriate certs, key, etc. There are many ways to reconfigure. NSS
** provides SSL_ReconfigFD function that can be used to update the socket
** data from model socket. To continue with the rest of the handshake, the
** implementation function should return an index of a name it has chosen.
** LibSSL will ignore any SNI extension received in a ClientHello message
** if application does not register a SSLSNISocketConfig callback.
** Each type field of SECItem indicates the name type.
** NOTE: currently RFC3546 defines only one name type: sni_host_name.
** Client is allowed to send only one name per known type. LibSSL will
** send an "unrecognized_name" alert if SNI extension name list contains more
** then one name of a type.
*/
typedef PRInt32(PR_CALLBACK *SSLSNISocketConfig)(PRFileDesc *fd,
const SECItem *srvNameArr,
PRUint32 srvNameArrSize,
void *arg);
/*
** SSLSNISocketConfig should return an index within 0 and srvNameArrSize-1
** when it has reconfigured the socket fd to use certs and keys, etc
** for a specific name. There are two other allowed return values. One
** tells libSSL to use the default cert and key. The other tells libSSL
** to send the "unrecognized_name" alert. These values are:
**/
#define SSL_SNI_CURRENT_CONFIG_IS_USED -1
#define SSL_SNI_SEND_ALERT -2
/*
** Set application implemented SNISocketConfig callback.
*/
SSL_IMPORT SECStatus SSL_SNISocketConfigHook(PRFileDesc *fd,
SSLSNISocketConfig f,
void *arg);
/*
** Reconfigure fd SSL socket with model socket parameters. Sets
** server certs and keys, list of trust anchor, socket options
** and all SSL socket call backs and parameters.
*/
SSL_IMPORT PRFileDesc *SSL_ReconfigFD(PRFileDesc *model, PRFileDesc *fd);
/*
* Set the client side argument for SSL to retrieve PKCS #11 pin.
* fd - the file descriptor for the connection in question
* a - pkcs11 application specific data
*/
SSL_IMPORT SECStatus SSL_SetPKCS11PinArg(PRFileDesc *fd, void *a);
/*
** These are callbacks for dealing with SSL alerts.
*/
typedef PRUint8 SSLAlertLevel;
typedef PRUint8 SSLAlertDescription;
typedef struct {
SSLAlertLevel level;
SSLAlertDescription description;
} SSLAlert;
typedef void(PR_CALLBACK *SSLAlertCallback)(const PRFileDesc *fd, void *arg,
const SSLAlert *alert);
SSL_IMPORT SECStatus SSL_AlertReceivedCallback(PRFileDesc *fd, SSLAlertCallback cb,
void *arg);
SSL_IMPORT SECStatus SSL_AlertSentCallback(PRFileDesc *fd, SSLAlertCallback cb,
void *arg);
/*
** This is a callback for dealing with server certs that are not authenticated
** by the client. The client app can decide that it actually likes the
** cert by some external means and restart the connection.
**
** The bad cert hook must return SECSuccess to override the result of the
** authenticate certificate hook, SECFailure if the certificate should still be
** considered invalid, or SECWouldBlock if the application will authenticate
** the certificate asynchronously. SECWouldBlock is only supported for
** non-blocking sockets.
**
** See the documentation for SSL_AuthCertificateComplete for more information
** about the asynchronous behavior that occurs when the bad cert hook returns
** SECWouldBlock.
*/
typedef SECStatus(PR_CALLBACK *SSLBadCertHandler)(void *arg, PRFileDesc *fd);
SSL_IMPORT SECStatus SSL_BadCertHook(PRFileDesc *fd, SSLBadCertHandler f,
void *arg);
/*
** Configure SSL socket for running a secure server. Needs the
** certificate for the server and the servers private key. The arguments
** are copied.
**
** This method should be used in preference to SSL_ConfigSecureServer,
** SSL_ConfigSecureServerWithCertChain, SSL_SetStapledOCSPResponses, and
** SSL_SetSignedCertTimestamps.
**
** The authentication method is determined from the certificate and private key
** based on how libssl authenticates peers. Primarily, this uses the value of
** the SSLAuthType enum and is derived from the type of public key in the
** certificate. For example, different RSA certificates might be saved for
** signing (ssl_auth_rsa_sign) and key encipherment
** (ssl_auth_rsa_decrypt). Unique to RSA, the same certificate can be used for
** both usages. Additional information about the authentication method is also
** used: EC keys with different curves are separately stored.
**
** Only one certificate is stored for each authentication method.
**
** The optional |data| argument contains additional information about the
** certificate:
**
** - |authType| (with a value other than ssl_auth_null) limits the
** authentication method; this is primarily useful in limiting the use of an
** RSA certificate to one particular key usage (either signing or key
** encipherment) when its key usages indicate support for both.
**
** - |certChain| provides an explicit certificate chain, rather than relying on
** NSS functions for finding a certificate chain.
**
** - |stapledOCSPResponses| provides a response for OCSP stapling.
**
** - |signedCertTimestamps| provides a value for the
** signed_certificate_timestamp extension used in certificate transparency.
**
** The |data_len| argument provides the length of the data. This should be set
** to |sizeof(data)|.
**
** This function allows an application to provide certificates with narrow key
** usages attached to them. For instance, RSA keys can be provided that are
** limited to signing or decryption only. Multiple EC certificates with keys on
** different named curves can be provided.
**
** Unlike SSL_ConfigSecureServer(WithCertChain), this function does not accept
** NULL for the |cert| and |key| arguments. It will replace certificates that
** have the same type, but it cannot be used to remove certificates that have
** already been configured.
*/
SSL_IMPORT SECStatus SSL_ConfigServerCert(
PRFileDesc *fd, CERTCertificate *cert, SECKEYPrivateKey *key,
const SSLExtraServerCertData *data, unsigned int data_len);
/*
** Deprecated variant of SSL_ConfigServerCert.
**
** This uses values from the SSLKEAType to identify the type of |key| that the
** |cert| contains. This is incorrect, since key exchange and authentication
** are separated in some cipher suites (in particular, ECDHE_RSA_* suites).
**
** Providing a |kea| parameter of ssl_kea_ecdh (or kt_ecdh) is interpreted as
** providing both ECDH and ECDSA certificates.
*/
SSL_IMPORT SECStatus SSL_ConfigSecureServer(
PRFileDesc *fd, CERTCertificate *cert,
SECKEYPrivateKey *key, SSLKEAType kea);
/*
** Deprecated variant of SSL_ConfigSecureServerCert. The |data| argument to
** SSL_ConfigSecureServerCert can be used to pass a certificate chain.
*/
SSL_IMPORT SECStatus
SSL_ConfigSecureServerWithCertChain(PRFileDesc *fd, CERTCertificate *cert,
const CERTCertificateList *certChainOpt,
SECKEYPrivateKey *key, SSLKEAType kea);
/*
** SSL_SetSessionTicketKeyPair configures an asymmetric key pair for use in
** wrapping session ticket keys, used by the server. This function currently
** only accepts an RSA public/private key pair.
**
** Prior to the existence of this function, NSS used an RSA private key
** associated with a configured certificate to perform session ticket
** encryption. If this function isn't used, the keys provided with a configured
** RSA certificate are used for wrapping session ticket keys.
**
** NOTE: This key is used for all self-encryption but is named for
** session tickets for historical reasons.
*/
SSL_IMPORT SECStatus
SSL_SetSessionTicketKeyPair(SECKEYPublicKey *pubKey, SECKEYPrivateKey *privKey);
/*
** Configure a secure server's session-id cache. Define the maximum number
** of entries in the cache, the longevity of the entires, and the directory
** where the cache files will be placed. These values can be zero, and
** if so, the implementation will choose defaults.
** This version of the function is for use in applications that have only one
** process that uses the cache (even if that process has multiple threads).
*/
SSL_IMPORT SECStatus SSL_ConfigServerSessionIDCache(int maxCacheEntries,
PRUint32 timeout,
PRUint32 ssl3_timeout,
const char *directory);
/* Configure a secure server's session-id cache. Depends on value of
* enableMPCache, configures malti-proc or single proc cache. */
SSL_IMPORT SECStatus SSL_ConfigServerSessionIDCacheWithOpt(
PRUint32 timeout,
PRUint32 ssl3_timeout,
const char *directory,
int maxCacheEntries,
int maxCertCacheEntries,
int maxSrvNameCacheEntries,
PRBool enableMPCache);
/*
** Like SSL_ConfigServerSessionIDCache, with one important difference.
** If the application will run multiple processes (as opposed to, or in
** addition to multiple threads), then it must call this function, instead
** of calling SSL_ConfigServerSessionIDCache().
** This has nothing to do with the number of processORs, only processEs.
** This function sets up a Server Session ID (SID) cache that is safe for
** access by multiple processes on the same system.
*/
SSL_IMPORT SECStatus SSL_ConfigMPServerSIDCache(int maxCacheEntries,
PRUint32 timeout,
PRUint32 ssl3_timeout,
const char *directory);
/* Get and set the configured maximum number of mutexes used for the
** server's store of SSL sessions. This value is used by the server
** session ID cache initialization functions shown above. Note that on
** some platforms, these mutexes are actually implemented with POSIX
** semaphores, or with unnamed pipes. The default value varies by platform.
** An attempt to set a too-low maximum will return an error and the
** configured value will not be changed.
*/
SSL_IMPORT PRUint32 SSL_GetMaxServerCacheLocks(void);
SSL_IMPORT SECStatus SSL_SetMaxServerCacheLocks(PRUint32 maxLocks);
/* environment variable set by SSL_ConfigMPServerSIDCache, and queried by
* SSL_InheritMPServerSIDCache when envString is NULL.
*/
#define SSL_ENV_VAR_NAME "SSL_INHERITANCE"
/* called in child to inherit SID Cache variables.
* If envString is NULL, this function will use the value of the environment
* variable "SSL_INHERITANCE", otherwise the string value passed in will be
* used.
*/
SSL_IMPORT SECStatus SSL_InheritMPServerSIDCache(const char *envString);
/*
** Set the callback that gets called when a TLS handshake is complete. The
** handshake callback is called after verifying the peer's Finished message and
** before processing incoming application data.
**
** For the initial handshake: If the handshake false started (see
** SSL_ENABLE_FALSE_START), then application data may already have been sent
** before the handshake callback is called. If we did not false start then the
** callback will get called before any application data is sent.
*/
typedef void(PR_CALLBACK *SSLHandshakeCallback)(PRFileDesc *fd,
void *client_data);
SSL_IMPORT SECStatus SSL_HandshakeCallback(PRFileDesc *fd,
SSLHandshakeCallback cb, void *client_data);
/* Applications that wish to enable TLS false start must set this callback
** function. NSS will invoke the functon to determine if a particular
** connection should use false start or not. SECSuccess indicates that the
** callback completed successfully, and if so *canFalseStart indicates if false
** start can be used. If the callback does not return SECSuccess then the
** handshake will be canceled. NSS's recommended criteria can be evaluated by
** calling SSL_RecommendedCanFalseStart.
**
** If no false start callback is registered then false start will never be
** done, even if the SSL_ENABLE_FALSE_START option is enabled.
**/
typedef SECStatus(PR_CALLBACK *SSLCanFalseStartCallback)(
PRFileDesc *fd, void *arg, PRBool *canFalseStart);
SSL_IMPORT SECStatus SSL_SetCanFalseStartCallback(
PRFileDesc *fd, SSLCanFalseStartCallback callback, void *arg);
/* This function sets *canFalseStart according to the recommended criteria for
** false start. These criteria may change from release to release and may depend
** on which handshake features have been negotiated and/or properties of the
** certifciates/keys used on the connection.
*/
SSL_IMPORT SECStatus SSL_RecommendedCanFalseStart(PRFileDesc *fd,
PRBool *canFalseStart);
/*
** For the server, request a new handshake. For the client, begin a new
** handshake. If flushCache is non-zero, the SSL3 cache entry will be
** flushed first, ensuring that a full SSL handshake will be done.
** If flushCache is zero, and an SSL connection is established, it will
** do the much faster session restart handshake. This will change the
** session keys without doing another private key operation.
*/
SSL_IMPORT SECStatus SSL_ReHandshake(PRFileDesc *fd, PRBool flushCache);
/*
** Same as above, but with an I/O timeout.
*/
SSL_IMPORT SECStatus SSL_ReHandshakeWithTimeout(PRFileDesc *fd,
PRBool flushCache,
PRIntervalTime timeout);
#ifdef SSL_DEPRECATED_FUNCTION
/* deprecated!
** For the server, request a new handshake. For the client, begin a new
** handshake. Flushes SSL3 session cache entry first, ensuring that a
** full handshake will be done.
** This call is equivalent to SSL_ReHandshake(fd, PR_TRUE)
*/
SSL_IMPORT SECStatus SSL_RedoHandshake(PRFileDesc *fd);
#endif
/*
* Allow the application to pass a URL or hostname into the SSL library.
*/
SSL_IMPORT SECStatus SSL_SetURL(PRFileDesc *fd, const char *url);
/*
* Allow an application to define a set of trust anchors for peer
* cert validation.
*/
SSL_IMPORT SECStatus SSL_SetTrustAnchors(PRFileDesc *fd, CERTCertList *list);
/*
** Return the number of bytes that SSL has waiting in internal buffers.
** Return 0 if security is not enabled.
*/
SSL_IMPORT int SSL_DataPending(PRFileDesc *fd);
/*
** Invalidate the SSL session associated with fd.
*/
SSL_IMPORT SECStatus SSL_InvalidateSession(PRFileDesc *fd);
/*
** Return a SECItem containing the SSL session ID associated with the fd.
*/
SSL_IMPORT SECItem *SSL_GetSessionID(PRFileDesc *fd);
/*
** Clear out the client's SSL session cache, not the server's session cache.
*/
SSL_IMPORT void SSL_ClearSessionCache(void);
/*
** Close the server's SSL session cache.
*/
SSL_IMPORT SECStatus SSL_ShutdownServerSessionIDCache(void);
/*
** Set peer information so we can correctly look up SSL session later.
** You only have to do this if you're tunneling through a proxy.
*/
SSL_IMPORT SECStatus SSL_SetSockPeerID(PRFileDesc *fd, const char *peerID);
/*
** Reveal the security information for the peer.
*/
SSL_IMPORT CERTCertificate *SSL_RevealCert(PRFileDesc *socket);
SSL_IMPORT void *SSL_RevealPinArg(PRFileDesc *socket);
SSL_IMPORT char *SSL_RevealURL(PRFileDesc *socket);
/* This callback may be passed to the SSL library via a call to
* SSL_GetClientAuthDataHook() for each SSL client socket.
* It will be invoked when SSL needs to know what certificate and private key
* (if any) to use to respond to a request for client authentication.
* If arg is non-NULL, it is a pointer to a NULL-terminated string containing
* the nickname of the cert/key pair to use.
* If arg is NULL, this function will search the cert and key databases for
* a suitable match and send it if one is found.
*/
SSL_IMPORT SECStatus
NSS_GetClientAuthData(void *arg,
PRFileDesc *socket,
struct CERTDistNamesStr *caNames,
struct CERTCertificateStr **pRetCert,
struct SECKEYPrivateKeyStr **pRetKey);
/* This function can be called by the appliation's custom GetClientAuthHook
* to filter out any certs in the cert list that doesn't match the negotiated
* requirements of the current SSL connection.
*/
SSL_IMPORT SECStatus
SSL_FilterClientCertListBySocket(PRFileDesc *socket, CERTCertList *certlist);
/* This function can be called by the application's custom GetClientAuthHook
* to determine if a single certificate matches the negotiated requirements of
* the current SSL connection.
*/
SSL_IMPORT PRBool
SSL_CertIsUsable(PRFileDesc *socket, CERTCertificate *cert);
/*
** Configure DTLS-SRTP (RFC 5764) cipher suite preferences.
** Input is a list of ciphers in descending preference order and a length
** of the list. As a side effect, this causes the use_srtp extension to be
** negotiated.
**
** Invalid or unimplemented cipher suites in |ciphers| are ignored. If at
** least one cipher suite in |ciphers| is implemented, returns SECSuccess.
** Otherwise returns SECFailure.
*/
SSL_IMPORT SECStatus SSL_SetSRTPCiphers(PRFileDesc *fd,
const PRUint16 *ciphers,
unsigned int numCiphers);
/*
** Get the selected DTLS-SRTP cipher suite (if any).
** To be called after the handshake completes.
** Returns SECFailure if not negotiated.
*/
SSL_IMPORT SECStatus SSL_GetSRTPCipher(PRFileDesc *fd,
PRUint16 *cipher);
/*
* Look to see if any of the signers in the cert chain for "cert" are found
* in the list of caNames.
* Returns SECSuccess if so, SECFailure if not.
* Used by NSS_GetClientAuthData. May be used by other callback functions.
*/
SSL_IMPORT SECStatus NSS_CmpCertChainWCANames(CERTCertificate *cert,
CERTDistNames *caNames);
/* Deprecated. This reports a misleading value for certificates that might
* be used for signing rather than key exchange.
* Returns key exchange type of the keys in an SSL server certificate.
*/
SSL_IMPORT SSLKEAType NSS_FindCertKEAType(CERTCertificate *cert);
/* Set cipher policies to a predefined Domestic (U.S.A.) policy.
* This essentially allows all supported ciphers.
*/
SSL_IMPORT SECStatus NSS_SetDomesticPolicy(void);
/* Set cipher policies to a predefined Policy that is exportable from the USA
* according to present U.S. policies as we understand them.
* It is the same as NSS_SetDomesticPolicy now.
*/
SSL_IMPORT SECStatus NSS_SetExportPolicy(void);
/* Set cipher policies to a predefined Policy that is exportable from the USA
* according to present U.S. policies as we understand them, and that the
* nation of France will permit to be imported into their country.
* It is the same as NSS_SetDomesticPolicy now.
*/
SSL_IMPORT SECStatus NSS_SetFrancePolicy(void);
SSL_IMPORT SSL3Statistics *SSL_GetStatistics(void);
/* Report more information than SSL_SecurityStatus.
* Caller supplies the info struct. This function fills it in. Caller should
* pass sizeof(SSLChannelInfo) as the |len| argument.
*
* The information here will be zeroed prior to details being confirmed. The
* details are confirmed either when a Finished message is received, or - for a
* client - when the second flight of messages have been sent. This function
* therefore produces unreliable results prior to receiving the
* SSLHandshakeCallback or the SSLCanFalseStartCallback.
*/
SSL_IMPORT SECStatus SSL_GetChannelInfo(PRFileDesc *fd, SSLChannelInfo *info,
PRUintn len);
/* Get preliminary information about a channel.
* Caller supplies the info struct. This function fills it in. Caller should
* pass sizeof(SSLPreliminaryChannelInfo) as the |len| argument.
*
* This function can be called prior to handshake details being confirmed (see
* SSL_GetChannelInfo above for what that means). Thus, information provided by
* this function is available to SSLAuthCertificate, SSLGetClientAuthData,
* SSLSNISocketConfig, and other callbacks that might be called during the
* processing of the first flight of client of server handshake messages.
* Values are marked as being unavailable when renegotiation is initiated.
*/
SSL_IMPORT SECStatus
SSL_GetPreliminaryChannelInfo(PRFileDesc *fd,
SSLPreliminaryChannelInfo *info,
PRUintn len);
/* Get information about cipher suite with id of |cipherSuite|.
* Caller supplies the info struct. This function fills it in. Caller should
* pass sizeof(SSLCipherSuiteInfo) as the |len| argument.
*/
SSL_IMPORT SECStatus SSL_GetCipherSuiteInfo(PRUint16 cipherSuite,
SSLCipherSuiteInfo *info, PRUintn len);
/* Returnes negotiated through SNI host info. */
SSL_IMPORT SECItem *SSL_GetNegotiatedHostInfo(PRFileDesc *fd);
/* Export keying material according to RFC 5705.
** fd must correspond to a TLS 1.0 or higher socket and out must
** already be allocated. If hasContext is false, it uses the no-context
** construction from the RFC and ignores the context and contextLen
** arguments.
*/
SSL_IMPORT SECStatus SSL_ExportKeyingMaterial(PRFileDesc *fd,
const char *label,
unsigned int labelLen,
PRBool hasContext,
const unsigned char *context,
unsigned int contextLen,
unsigned char *out,
unsigned int outLen);
/* Early exporters are used if 0-RTT is enabled. This is TLS 1.3 only. Note
* that in TLS 1.3, an empty context is equivalent to an absent context. */
SSL_IMPORT SECStatus SSL_ExportEarlyKeyingMaterial(PRFileDesc *fd,
const char *label,
unsigned int labelLen,
const unsigned char *context,
unsigned int contextLen,
unsigned char *out,
unsigned int outLen);
/*
** Return a new reference to the certificate that was most recently sent
** to the peer on this SSL/TLS connection, or NULL if none has been sent.
*/
SSL_IMPORT CERTCertificate *SSL_LocalCertificate(PRFileDesc *fd);
#define SSL_CBP_SSL3 0x0001 /* (deprecated) */
#define SSL_CBP_TLS1_0 0x0002 /* (deprecated) */
/* DEPRECATED: The PKCS#11 bypass has been removed.
** This function will now always return false. */
SSL_IMPORT SECStatus SSL_CanBypass(CERTCertificate *cert,
SECKEYPrivateKey *privKey,
PRUint32 protocolmask,
PRUint16 *ciphers, int nciphers,
PRBool *pcanbypass, void *pwArg);
/*
** Did the handshake with the peer negotiate the given extension?
** Output parameter valid only if function returns SECSuccess
*/
SSL_IMPORT SECStatus SSL_HandshakeNegotiatedExtension(PRFileDesc *socket,
SSLExtensionType extId,
PRBool *yes);
/*
** How long should we wait before retransmitting the next flight of
** the DTLS handshake? Returns SECFailure if not DTLS or not in a
** handshake.
*/
SSL_IMPORT SECStatus DTLS_GetHandshakeTimeout(PRFileDesc *socket,
PRIntervalTime *timeout);
/*
* Return a boolean that indicates whether the underlying library
* will perform as the caller expects.
*
* The only argument is a string, which should be the version
* identifier of the NSS library. That string will be compared
* against a string that represents the actual build version of
* the SSL library.
*/
extern PRBool NSSSSL_VersionCheck(const char *importedVersion);
/*
* Returns a const string of the SSL library version.
*/
extern const char *NSSSSL_GetVersion(void);
/* Restart an SSL connection that was paused to do asynchronous certificate
* chain validation (when the auth certificate hook or bad cert handler
* returned SECWouldBlock).
*
* This function only works for non-blocking sockets; Do not use it for
* blocking sockets. Currently, this function works only for the client role of
* a connection; it does not work for the server role.
*
* The application must call SSL_AuthCertificateComplete with 0 as the value of
* the error parameter after it has successfully validated the peer's
* certificate, in order to continue the SSL handshake.
*
* The application may call SSL_AuthCertificateComplete with a non-zero value
* for error (e.g. SEC_ERROR_REVOKED_CERTIFICATE) when certificate validation
* fails, before it closes the connection. If the application does so, an
* alert corresponding to the error (e.g. certificate_revoked) will be sent to
* the peer. See the source code of the internal function
* ssl3_SendAlertForCertError for the current mapping of error to alert. This
* mapping may change in future versions of libssl.
*
* This function will not complete the entire handshake. The application must
* call SSL_ForceHandshake, PR_Recv, PR_Send, etc. after calling this function
* to force the handshake to complete.
*
* On the first handshake of a connection, libssl will wait for the peer's
* certificate to be authenticated before calling the handshake callback,
* sending a client certificate, sending any application data, or returning
* any application data to the application. On subsequent (renegotiation)
* handshakes, libssl will block the handshake unconditionally while the
* certificate is being validated.
*
* libssl may send and receive handshake messages while waiting for the
* application to call SSL_AuthCertificateComplete, and it may call other
* callbacks (e.g, the client auth data hook) before
* SSL_AuthCertificateComplete has been called.
*
* An application that uses this asynchronous mechanism will usually have lower
* handshake latency if it has to do public key operations on the certificate
* chain and/or CRL/OCSP/cert fetching during the authentication, especially if
* it does so in parallel on another thread. However, if the application can
* authenticate the peer's certificate quickly then it may be more efficient
* to use the synchronous mechanism (i.e. returning SECFailure/SECSuccess
* instead of SECWouldBlock from the authenticate certificate hook).
*
* Be careful about converting an application from synchronous cert validation
* to asynchronous certificate validation. A naive conversion is likely to
* result in deadlocks; e.g. the application will wait in PR_Poll for network
* I/O on the connection while all network I/O on the connection is blocked
* waiting for this function to be called.
*
* Returns SECFailure on failure, SECSuccess on success. Never returns
* SECWouldBlock. Note that SSL_AuthCertificateComplete will (usually) return
* SECSuccess; do not interpret the return value of SSL_AuthCertificateComplete
* as an indicator of whether it is OK to continue using the connection. For
* example, SSL_AuthCertificateComplete(fd, SEC_ERROR_REVOKED_CERTIFICATE) will
* return SECSuccess (normally), but that does not mean that the application
* should continue using the connection. If the application passes a non-zero
* value for second argument (error), or if SSL_AuthCertificateComplete returns
* anything other than SECSuccess, then the application should close the
* connection.
*/
SSL_IMPORT SECStatus SSL_AuthCertificateComplete(PRFileDesc *fd,
PRErrorCode error);
/* Restart an SSL connection which was paused to do asynchronous client
* certificate selection (when the client certificate hook returned SECWouldBlock).
*
* This function only works for non-blocking sockets; Do not use it for
* blocking sockets. This function works only for the client role of
* a connection; it does not work for the server role.
*
* If a certificate has been sucessfully selected, the application must call
* SSL_ClientCertCallbackComplete with:
* - SECSuccess (0) as the value of outcome
* - a valid SECKEYPrivateKey located at *clientPrivateKey
* - a valid CERTCertificate located at *clientCertificate
* The ownership of these latter structures will pass to NSS and the application
* MUST not retain any references to them or invalidate them.
*
* If a certificate has not been selected, the application must call
* SSL_ClientCertCallbackComplete with:
* - SECFailure (-1) as the value of outcome
* - *clientPrivateKey set to NULL.
* - *clientCertificate set to NULL
*
* Once the application has returned SECWouldBlock to getClientAuthData
* the handshake will not proceed until this function is called. It is an
* error to call this function when the handshake is not waiting on client
* certificate selection, or to call this function more than once.
* This function will not complete the entire handshake. The application must
* call SSL_ForceHandshake, PR_Recv, PR_Send, etc. after calling this function
* to force the handshake to complete.
*
* Be careful about converting an application from synchronous cert selection
* to asynchronous certificate selection. A naive conversion is likely to
* result in deadlocks; e.g. the application will wait in PR_Poll for network
* I/O on the connection while all network I/O on the connection is blocked
* waiting for this function to be called.
*
* Note that SSL_ClientCertCallbackComplete will (usually) return
* SECSuccess; SECFailure indicates that the function was invoked incorrectly or
* an error whilst processing the handshake. The return code does not indicate
* whether or not the provided private key and certificate were sucessfully loaded
* or accepted by the server.
*/
SSL_IMPORT SECStatus SSL_ClientCertCallbackComplete(PRFileDesc *fd, SECStatus outcome, SECKEYPrivateKey *clientPrivateKey, CERTCertificate *clientCertificate);
/*
* This is used to access experimental APIs. Don't call this directly. This is
* used to enable the experimental APIs that are defined in "sslexp.h".
*/
SSL_IMPORT void *SSL_GetExperimentalAPI(const char *name);
SEC_END_PROTOS
#endif /* __ssl_h_ */