Version 48 (modified by 17 years ago) (diff) | ,
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Table of Contents
General Description
Pidgin doesn't currently do any certificate verification for SSL. In order to properly do this and ensure security, a certificate manager (something like Mozilla's) needs to be added.
This is William Ehlhardt's project for Summer of Code
Branch
im.pidgin.soc.2007.certmgr
Related Pages
Handy-dandy overview
SSL: The Connection Process
- purple_ssl_connect called, and the "tls_peers" CertificateVerifier? is provided to it as the method to use for cert checking
- ssl_connect looks up the "x509" CertificateScheme?, making sure that it is loaded
- ssl_connect fetches a the host's certificate
- ssl_connect asks the "tls_peers" CertificateVerifier? for verification of the certificate.
- The tls_peers CertificateVerifier? sees if the get_unique_id(cert) can be found within the pool "tls_servers". If so, the certificate is considered Verified, and control returns to ssl_connect, which proceeds to the Hostname Check.
- If the certificate cannot be found in the "tls_servers" pool, the tls_peers Verifier then checks the "tls_ca" pool to see if the certificate chain (using get_signer_unique_id(cert)) leads to any certificates in the "tls_ca" pool. If it does find such a certificate, it uses the check_signature function to verify the signature chain, and if THAT passes, control returns to ssl_connect, which proceeds to the Hostname Check.
- If the tls_peers CertVerifier? finds an invalid (apparently attempted forged) signature, the connection fails and the user is given a popup detailing the reason.
- If the tls_peers CertVerifier? fails to find any appropriate signers in the "tls_ca" or "tls_servers" pool, the user is prompted with the certificate details given by get_verification_data. If the certificate passes user prompting, tls_peers->bless_certificate is called.
- If tls_peers finds an expired certificate or any other problem, the connection is aborted with an error.
- We shouldn't get to step 10.
Hostname Check
(some logic needs to be changed here to ensure that we don't prompt every connect for incorrect CN fields)
- ssl_connect checks that the certificate Common Name matches the hostname being connected to. If it matches, it completes the connection initialization. The hostname check may not always work, though, so:
- If the hostname check fails, ssl_connect will prompt the user with the certificate data and a warning that the hostname check failed.
- If the user accepts the certificate anyways, ssl_connect calls bless_certificate in the tls_peers CertificateVerifier?, which adds it to the "tls_peers" pool. The connection initialization is then completed. (The exact action at this step is not really laid in stone, though)
CertificateScheme? API
- Closely modeled on Cipher API
struct Certificate
- CertificateScheme? * scheme
- Internal data
struct CertificateScheme?
Will be registered into an internal list of scheme types
- char * name = "x509", "pgp", etc. This must be internally unique - there must be only ONE CertificateScheme? for each name. This is to pre-empt the possibility of someone creating some Certificate instances with a GnuTLS backend and then feeding them to a libNSS backend.
- int ref - for reference counting
- Certificate * import_certificate(file arguments) -
- export_certificate(filename?)
- gboolean check_signature(Certificate * certificate, Certificate * signer) - returns whether one certificate is signed by another
- (some_tuple_list_type) get_verification_data() - returns a list of key-value pairs containing things to show to the user to check the certificate's validity. It's not strictly key-value due to i18n concerns, but here is an example: [ ("fpr_sha1","0123456789abcdef0123456789abcdef",_("SHA1 Fingerprint")), ("common_name","gmail.com",_("Common Name")), NULL ]
- char * get_unique_id - returns a string (probably something involving a key fingerprint) that can usefully be used to uniquely identify this certificate (for storage purposes)
- char * get_signer_unique_id - returns a unique identifier for the key used to sign the certificate
- destroy_certificate(Certificate * crt) - when a certificate's life has reached its end, call this to get rid of it. Will execute free(crt) for you.
Certificate Scheme Requirements
Requirements for implementors of various CertificateSchemes?
X.509
Name | "x509" |
import_certificate File Format | PEM |
unique_id construction | Not yet defined |
struct CertificatePool?
- char * name - the pool identifier
- CertificateScheme? * scheme - certificate type this pool is filled with
- gboolean exists_in_pool(unique_id) - checks for the presence of a given cert in the pool (see get_unique_id above) (may take Certificate instead of unique_id?)
- Certificate * retrieve_certificate(unique_id)
- store_certificate(Certificate) - overwrites previous certificate by unique_id if it exists
struct CertificateVerifier?
- char * name - unique identifier ("tls_peers", "silc_servers", etc.)
- CertificateScheme? * scheme - certificate type this Verifier works with
- bless_certificate - forces the certificate's verification (just calls CertificatePool?->store_certificate, most likely)
- gboolean certificate_is_valid (Certificate) - returns whether a certificate can be verified as trustworthy.
- Perhaps it should also take an expected_values argument of the same form as the return value from get_verification_data(Certificate) to specify some values to check (such as Common Name, which maybe ought to be optional?)
SslOps? Additions
- GList * get_peer_certificates - fetches as much of the certificate chain as the peer is willing to provide off of the wire and exports the certificates as several "x509" Certificate instances. The order should probably be "peer's cert, issuer's cert, issuer's issuer's cert, etc.", but this may not be guaranteed. TODO: examine ordering here.
Key Store
Managed by a CertificatePool?.
The API for this hasn't been totally decided yet. However, the organization will look something like this:
~/.purple/certificates/cert_scheme_name/cert_pool/cert_unique_id(.pem?)
So an example X.509 certificate might be stored as:
~/.purple/certificates/x509/tls_servers/gmail_com_1234567890abcdef1234567890abcdef.pem
The keystore logic will be left mostly up to the relevant CertificatePool?; these are only guidelines for how the CertificatePools? should run their backends.
Miscellaneous API changes
- Jabber (and possibly other protocols) use purple_ssl_connect_fd to create SSL connections, throwing out possibly important data about the other end of the connection (hostname, port number) in the process. In the interests of keeping this data intact, I propose adding a purple_ssl_connect_proxyconn that will create an SSL connection around a previously existing ProxyConnection? instead of ripping out its file descriptor and starting anew.
Status
x509 CertificateScheme?
Member | Backend (GnuTLS) | Backend (NSS) | libpurple frontend |
import_certificate | Written, untested, Exposed | Not started | Not started |
destroy_certificate | Written, untested, Exposed | Not started | Not started |
SslOps? modifications
Member | Backend (GnuTLS) | Backend (NSS) | libpurple frontend |
get_peer_certificates | Written, untested, Exposed | Not started | purple_ssl_get_peer_certificates |
certificate.h
Function | Prototyped | Implemented | Tested |
find_scheme | Yes | Yes | No |
register_scheme | Yes | Yes | No |
unregister_scheme | No | No | No |
Miscellany
purple_ssl_connect_with_host_fd | Pulled from soc.2007.xmpp |