tls: introduce client 'session' event by sam-github · Pull Request #25831 · nodejs/node
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Feb 1, 2019OpenSSL has supported async notification of sessions and tickets since 1.1.0 using SSL_CTX_sess_set_new_cb(), for all versions of TLS. Using the async API is optional for TLS1.2 and below, but for TLS1.3 it will be mandatory. Future-proof applications should start to use async notification immediately. In the future, for TLS1.3, applications that don't use the async API will silently, but gracefully, fail to resume sessions and instead do a full handshake. See: https://wiki.openssl.org/index.php/TLS1.3#Sessions
addaleax pushed a commit that referenced this pull request
Feb 6, 2019OpenSSL has supported async notification of sessions and tickets since 1.1.0 using SSL_CTX_sess_set_new_cb(), for all versions of TLS. Using the async API is optional for TLS1.2 and below, but for TLS1.3 it will be mandatory. Future-proof applications should start to use async notification immediately. In the future, for TLS1.3, applications that don't use the async API will silently, but gracefully, fail to resume sessions and instead do a full handshake. See: https://wiki.openssl.org/index.php/TLS1.3#Sessions PR-URL: #25831 Reviewed-By: Anna Henningsen <anna@addaleax.net> Reviewed-By: Fedor Indutny <fedor.indutny@gmail.com>
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Feb 15, 2019sam-github added a commit to sam-github/node that referenced this pull request
Mar 19, 2019This introduces TLS1.3 support and makes it the default max protocol,
but also supports CLI/NODE_OPTIONS switches to disable it if necessary.
TLS1.3 is a major update to the TLS protocol, with many security
enhancements. It should be preferred over TLS1.2 whenever possible.
TLS1.3 is different enough that even though the OpenSSL APIs are
technically API/ABI compatible, that when TLS1.3 is negotiated, the
timing of protocol records and of callbacks broke assumptions hard-coded
into the 'tls' module.
This change introduces no API incompatibilities when TLS1.2 is
negotiated. It is the intention that it be backported to current and LTS
release lines with the default maximum TLS protocol reset to 'TLSv1.2'.
This will allow users of those lines to explicitly enable TLS1.3 if they
want.
API incompatibilities between TLS1.2 and TLS1.3 are:
- Renegotiation is not supported by TLS1.3 protocol, attempts to call
`.renegotiate()` will always fail.
- Compiling against a system OpenSSL lower than 1.1.1 is no longer
supported (OpenSSL-1.1.0 used to be supported with configure flags).
- Variations of `conn.write('data'); conn.destroy()` have undefined
behaviour according to the streams API. They may or may not send the
'data', and may or may not cause a ERR_STREAM_DESTROYED error to be
emitted. This has always been true, but conditions under which the write
suceeds is slightly but observably different when TLS1.3 is negotiated
vs when TLS1.2 or below is negotiated.
- If TLS1.3 is negotiated, and a server calls `conn.end()` in its
'secureConnection' listener without any data being written, the client
will not receive session tickets (no 'session' events will be emitted,
and `conn.getSession()` will never return a resumable session).
- The return value of `conn.getSession()` API may not return a resumable
session if called right after the handshake. The effect will be that
clients using the legacy `getSession()` API will resume sessions if
TLS1.2 is negotiated, but will do full handshakes if TLS1.3 is
negotiated. See nodejs#25831 for more
information.
sam-github added a commit that referenced this pull request
Mar 20, 2019This introduces TLS1.3 support and makes it the default max protocol,
but also supports CLI/NODE_OPTIONS switches to disable it if necessary.
TLS1.3 is a major update to the TLS protocol, with many security
enhancements. It should be preferred over TLS1.2 whenever possible.
TLS1.3 is different enough that even though the OpenSSL APIs are
technically API/ABI compatible, that when TLS1.3 is negotiated, the
timing of protocol records and of callbacks broke assumptions hard-coded
into the 'tls' module.
This change introduces no API incompatibilities when TLS1.2 is
negotiated. It is the intention that it be backported to current and LTS
release lines with the default maximum TLS protocol reset to 'TLSv1.2'.
This will allow users of those lines to explicitly enable TLS1.3 if they
want.
API incompatibilities between TLS1.2 and TLS1.3 are:
- Renegotiation is not supported by TLS1.3 protocol, attempts to call
`.renegotiate()` will always fail.
- Compiling against a system OpenSSL lower than 1.1.1 is no longer
supported (OpenSSL-1.1.0 used to be supported with configure flags).
- Variations of `conn.write('data'); conn.destroy()` have undefined
behaviour according to the streams API. They may or may not send the
'data', and may or may not cause a ERR_STREAM_DESTROYED error to be
emitted. This has always been true, but conditions under which the write
suceeds is slightly but observably different when TLS1.3 is negotiated
vs when TLS1.2 or below is negotiated.
- If TLS1.3 is negotiated, and a server calls `conn.end()` in its
'secureConnection' listener without any data being written, the client
will not receive session tickets (no 'session' events will be emitted,
and `conn.getSession()` will never return a resumable session).
- The return value of `conn.getSession()` API may not return a resumable
session if called right after the handshake. The effect will be that
clients using the legacy `getSession()` API will resume sessions if
TLS1.2 is negotiated, but will do full handshakes if TLS1.3 is
negotiated. See #25831 for more
information.
PR-URL: #26209
Reviewed-By: Anna Henningsen <anna@addaleax.net>
Reviewed-By: James M Snell <jasnell@gmail.com>
Reviewed-By: Rod Vagg <rod@vagg.org>
sam-github added a commit to sam-github/node that referenced this pull request
Apr 1, 2019This introduces TLS1.3 support and makes it the default max protocol,
but also supports CLI/NODE_OPTIONS switches to disable it if necessary.
TLS1.3 is a major update to the TLS protocol, with many security
enhancements. It should be preferred over TLS1.2 whenever possible.
TLS1.3 is different enough that even though the OpenSSL APIs are
technically API/ABI compatible, that when TLS1.3 is negotiated, the
timing of protocol records and of callbacks broke assumptions hard-coded
into the 'tls' module.
This change introduces no API incompatibilities when TLS1.2 is
negotiated. It is the intention that it be backported to current and LTS
release lines with the default maximum TLS protocol reset to 'TLSv1.2'.
This will allow users of those lines to explicitly enable TLS1.3 if they
want.
API incompatibilities between TLS1.2 and TLS1.3 are:
- Renegotiation is not supported by TLS1.3 protocol, attempts to call
`.renegotiate()` will always fail.
- Compiling against a system OpenSSL lower than 1.1.1 is no longer
supported (OpenSSL-1.1.0 used to be supported with configure flags).
- Variations of `conn.write('data'); conn.destroy()` have undefined
behaviour according to the streams API. They may or may not send the
'data', and may or may not cause a ERR_STREAM_DESTROYED error to be
emitted. This has always been true, but conditions under which the write
suceeds is slightly but observably different when TLS1.3 is negotiated
vs when TLS1.2 or below is negotiated.
- If TLS1.3 is negotiated, and a server calls `conn.end()` in its
'secureConnection' listener without any data being written, the client
will not receive session tickets (no 'session' events will be emitted,
and `conn.getSession()` will never return a resumable session).
- The return value of `conn.getSession()` API may not return a resumable
session if called right after the handshake. The effect will be that
clients using the legacy `getSession()` API will resume sessions if
TLS1.2 is negotiated, but will do full handshakes if TLS1.3 is
negotiated. See nodejs#25831 for more
information.
PR-URL: nodejs#26209
Reviewed-By: Anna Henningsen <anna@addaleax.net>
Reviewed-By: James M Snell <jasnell@gmail.com>
Reviewed-By: Rod Vagg <rod@vagg.org>
sam-github added a commit to sam-github/node that referenced this pull request
Apr 11, 2019This introduces TLS1.3 support and makes it the default max protocol,
but also supports CLI/NODE_OPTIONS switches to disable it if necessary.
TLS1.3 is a major update to the TLS protocol, with many security
enhancements. It should be preferred over TLS1.2 whenever possible.
TLS1.3 is different enough that even though the OpenSSL APIs are
technically API/ABI compatible, that when TLS1.3 is negotiated, the
timing of protocol records and of callbacks broke assumptions hard-coded
into the 'tls' module.
This change introduces no API incompatibilities when TLS1.2 is
negotiated. It is the intention that it be backported to current and LTS
release lines with the default maximum TLS protocol reset to 'TLSv1.2'.
This will allow users of those lines to explicitly enable TLS1.3 if they
want.
API incompatibilities between TLS1.2 and TLS1.3 are:
- Renegotiation is not supported by TLS1.3 protocol, attempts to call
`.renegotiate()` will always fail.
- Compiling against a system OpenSSL lower than 1.1.1 is no longer
supported (OpenSSL-1.1.0 used to be supported with configure flags).
- Variations of `conn.write('data'); conn.destroy()` have undefined
behaviour according to the streams API. They may or may not send the
'data', and may or may not cause a ERR_STREAM_DESTROYED error to be
emitted. This has always been true, but conditions under which the write
suceeds is slightly but observably different when TLS1.3 is negotiated
vs when TLS1.2 or below is negotiated.
- If TLS1.3 is negotiated, and a server calls `conn.end()` in its
'secureConnection' listener without any data being written, the client
will not receive session tickets (no 'session' events will be emitted,
and `conn.getSession()` will never return a resumable session).
- The return value of `conn.getSession()` API may not return a resumable
session if called right after the handshake. The effect will be that
clients using the legacy `getSession()` API will resume sessions if
TLS1.2 is negotiated, but will do full handshakes if TLS1.3 is
negotiated. See nodejs#25831 for more
information.
PR-URL: nodejs#26209
Reviewed-By: Anna Henningsen <anna@addaleax.net>
Reviewed-By: James M Snell <jasnell@gmail.com>
Reviewed-By: Rod Vagg <rod@vagg.org>
BethGriggs pushed a commit that referenced this pull request
Apr 15, 2019This introduces TLS1.3 support and makes it the default max protocol,
but also supports CLI/NODE_OPTIONS switches to disable it if necessary.
TLS1.3 is a major update to the TLS protocol, with many security
enhancements. It should be preferred over TLS1.2 whenever possible.
TLS1.3 is different enough that even though the OpenSSL APIs are
technically API/ABI compatible, that when TLS1.3 is negotiated, the
timing of protocol records and of callbacks broke assumptions hard-coded
into the 'tls' module.
This change introduces no API incompatibilities when TLS1.2 is
negotiated. It is the intention that it be backported to current and LTS
release lines with the default maximum TLS protocol reset to 'TLSv1.2'.
This will allow users of those lines to explicitly enable TLS1.3 if they
want.
API incompatibilities between TLS1.2 and TLS1.3 are:
- Renegotiation is not supported by TLS1.3 protocol, attempts to call
`.renegotiate()` will always fail.
- Compiling against a system OpenSSL lower than 1.1.1 is no longer
supported (OpenSSL-1.1.0 used to be supported with configure flags).
- Variations of `conn.write('data'); conn.destroy()` have undefined
behaviour according to the streams API. They may or may not send the
'data', and may or may not cause a ERR_STREAM_DESTROYED error to be
emitted. This has always been true, but conditions under which the write
suceeds is slightly but observably different when TLS1.3 is negotiated
vs when TLS1.2 or below is negotiated.
- If TLS1.3 is negotiated, and a server calls `conn.end()` in its
'secureConnection' listener without any data being written, the client
will not receive session tickets (no 'session' events will be emitted,
and `conn.getSession()` will never return a resumable session).
- The return value of `conn.getSession()` API may not return a resumable
session if called right after the handshake. The effect will be that
clients using the legacy `getSession()` API will resume sessions if
TLS1.2 is negotiated, but will do full handshakes if TLS1.3 is
negotiated. See #25831 for more
information.
Backport-PR-URL: #26951
PR-URL: #26209
Reviewed-By: Anna Henningsen <anna@addaleax.net>
Reviewed-By: James M Snell <jasnell@gmail.com>
Reviewed-By: Rod Vagg <rod@vagg.org>
sam-github added a commit to sam-github/node that referenced this pull request
Apr 29, 2019OpenSSL has supported async notification of sessions and tickets since 1.1.0 using SSL_CTX_sess_set_new_cb(), for all versions of TLS. Using the async API is optional for TLS1.2 and below, but for TLS1.3 it will be mandatory. Future-proof applications should start to use async notification immediately. In the future, for TLS1.3, applications that don't use the async API will silently, but gracefully, fail to resume sessions and instead do a full handshake. See: https://wiki.openssl.org/index.php/TLS1.3#Sessions PR-URL: nodejs#25831 Reviewed-By: Anna Henningsen <anna@addaleax.net> Reviewed-By: Fedor Indutny <fedor.indutny@gmail.com>
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