You cannot select more than 25 topics Topics must start with a letter or number, can include dashes ('-') and can be up to 35 characters long.
tailscale/tempfork/x509/verify.go

1113 lines
33 KiB
Go

This file contains ambiguous Unicode characters!

This file contains ambiguous Unicode characters that may be confused with others in your current locale. If your use case is intentional and legitimate, you can safely ignore this warning. Use the Escape button to highlight these characters.

// Copyright 2011 The Go Authors. All rights reserved.
// Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style
// license that can be found in the LICENSE file.
package x509
import (
"bytes"
"errors"
"fmt"
"net"
"net/url"
"os"
"reflect"
"runtime"
"strings"
"time"
"unicode/utf8"
)
// ignoreCN disables interpreting Common Name as a hostname. See issue 24151.
var ignoreCN = strings.Contains(os.Getenv("GODEBUG"), "x509ignoreCN=1")
type InvalidReason int
const (
// NotAuthorizedToSign results when a certificate is signed by another
// which isn't marked as a CA certificate.
NotAuthorizedToSign InvalidReason = iota
// Expired results when a certificate has expired, based on the time
// given in the VerifyOptions.
Expired
// CANotAuthorizedForThisName results when an intermediate or root
// certificate has a name constraint which doesn't permit a DNS or
// other name (including IP address) in the leaf certificate.
CANotAuthorizedForThisName
// TooManyIntermediates results when a path length constraint is
// violated.
TooManyIntermediates
// IncompatibleUsage results when the certificate's key usage indicates
// that it may only be used for a different purpose.
IncompatibleUsage
// NameMismatch results when the subject name of a parent certificate
// does not match the issuer name in the child.
NameMismatch
// NameConstraintsWithoutSANs results when a leaf certificate doesn't
// contain a Subject Alternative Name extension, but a CA certificate
// contains name constraints, and the Common Name can be interpreted as
// a hostname.
//
// You can avoid this error by setting the experimental GODEBUG environment
// variable to "x509ignoreCN=1", disabling Common Name matching entirely.
// This behavior might become the default in the future.
NameConstraintsWithoutSANs
// UnconstrainedName results when a CA certificate contains permitted
// name constraints, but leaf certificate contains a name of an
// unsupported or unconstrained type.
UnconstrainedName
// TooManyConstraints results when the number of comparison operations
// needed to check a certificate exceeds the limit set by
// VerifyOptions.MaxConstraintComparisions. This limit exists to
// prevent pathological certificates can consuming excessive amounts of
// CPU time to verify.
TooManyConstraints
// CANotAuthorizedForExtKeyUsage results when an intermediate or root
// certificate does not permit a requested extended key usage.
CANotAuthorizedForExtKeyUsage
)
// CertificateInvalidError results when an odd error occurs. Users of this
// library probably want to handle all these errors uniformly.
type CertificateInvalidError struct {
Cert *Certificate
Reason InvalidReason
Detail string
}
func (e CertificateInvalidError) Error() string {
switch e.Reason {
case NotAuthorizedToSign:
return "x509: certificate is not authorized to sign other certificates"
case Expired:
return "x509: certificate has expired or is not yet valid: " + e.Detail
case CANotAuthorizedForThisName:
return "x509: a root or intermediate certificate is not authorized to sign for this name: " + e.Detail
case CANotAuthorizedForExtKeyUsage:
return "x509: a root or intermediate certificate is not authorized for an extended key usage: " + e.Detail
case TooManyIntermediates:
return "x509: too many intermediates for path length constraint"
case IncompatibleUsage:
return "x509: certificate specifies an incompatible key usage"
case NameMismatch:
return "x509: issuer name does not match subject from issuing certificate"
case NameConstraintsWithoutSANs:
return "x509: issuer has name constraints but leaf doesn't have a SAN extension"
case UnconstrainedName:
return "x509: issuer has name constraints but leaf contains unknown or unconstrained name: " + e.Detail
}
return "x509: unknown error"
}
// HostnameError results when the set of authorized names doesn't match the
// requested name.
type HostnameError struct {
Certificate *Certificate
Host string
}
func (h HostnameError) Error() string {
c := h.Certificate
if !c.hasSANExtension() && !validHostname(c.Subject.CommonName) &&
matchHostnames(toLowerCaseASCII(c.Subject.CommonName), toLowerCaseASCII(h.Host)) {
// This would have validated, if it weren't for the validHostname check on Common Name.
return "x509: Common Name is not a valid hostname: " + c.Subject.CommonName
}
var valid string
if ip := net.ParseIP(h.Host); ip != nil {
// Trying to validate an IP
if len(c.IPAddresses) == 0 {
return "x509: cannot validate certificate for " + h.Host + " because it doesn't contain any IP SANs"
}
for _, san := range c.IPAddresses {
if len(valid) > 0 {
valid += ", "
}
valid += san.String()
}
} else {
if c.commonNameAsHostname() {
valid = c.Subject.CommonName
} else {
valid = strings.Join(c.DNSNames, ", ")
}
}
if len(valid) == 0 {
return "x509: certificate is not valid for any names, but wanted to match " + h.Host
}
return "x509: certificate is valid for " + valid + ", not " + h.Host
}
// UnknownAuthorityError results when the certificate issuer is unknown
type UnknownAuthorityError struct {
Cert *Certificate
// hintErr contains an error that may be helpful in determining why an
// authority wasn't found.
hintErr error
// hintCert contains a possible authority certificate that was rejected
// because of the error in hintErr.
hintCert *Certificate
}
func (e UnknownAuthorityError) Error() string {
s := "x509: certificate signed by unknown authority"
if e.hintErr != nil {
certName := e.hintCert.Subject.CommonName
if len(certName) == 0 {
if len(e.hintCert.Subject.Organization) > 0 {
certName = e.hintCert.Subject.Organization[0]
} else {
certName = "serial:" + e.hintCert.SerialNumber.String()
}
}
s += fmt.Sprintf(" (possibly because of %q while trying to verify candidate authority certificate %q)", e.hintErr, certName)
}
return s
}
// SystemRootsError results when we fail to load the system root certificates.
type SystemRootsError struct {
Err error
}
func (se SystemRootsError) Error() string {
msg := "x509: failed to load system roots and no roots provided"
if se.Err != nil {
return msg + "; " + se.Err.Error()
}
return msg
}
// errNotParsed is returned when a certificate without ASN.1 contents is
// verified. Platform-specific verification needs the ASN.1 contents.
var errNotParsed = errors.New("x509: missing ASN.1 contents; use ParseCertificate")
// VerifyOptions contains parameters for Certificate.Verify. It's a structure
// because other PKIX verification APIs have ended up needing many options.
type VerifyOptions struct {
DNSName string
Intermediates *CertPool
Roots *CertPool // if nil, the system roots are used
CurrentTime time.Time // if zero, the current time is used
// KeyUsage specifies which Extended Key Usage values are acceptable. A leaf
// certificate is accepted if it contains any of the listed values. An empty
// list means ExtKeyUsageServerAuth. To accept any key usage, include
// ExtKeyUsageAny.
//
// Certificate chains are required to nest these extended key usage values.
// (This matches the Windows CryptoAPI behavior, but not the spec.)
KeyUsages []ExtKeyUsage
// MaxConstraintComparisions is the maximum number of comparisons to
// perform when checking a given certificate's name constraints. If
// zero, a sensible default is used. This limit prevents pathological
// certificates from consuming excessive amounts of CPU time when
// validating.
MaxConstraintComparisions int
}
const (
leafCertificate = iota
intermediateCertificate
rootCertificate
)
// rfc2821Mailbox represents a “mailbox” (which is an email address to most
// people) by breaking it into the “local” (i.e. before the '@') and “domain”
// parts.
type rfc2821Mailbox struct {
local, domain string
}
// parseRFC2821Mailbox parses an email address into local and domain parts,
// based on the ABNF for a “Mailbox” from RFC 2821. According to RFC 5280,
// Section 4.2.1.6 that's correct for an rfc822Name from a certificate: “The
// format of an rfc822Name is a "Mailbox" as defined in RFC 2821, Section 4.1.2”.
func parseRFC2821Mailbox(in string) (mailbox rfc2821Mailbox, ok bool) {
if len(in) == 0 {
return mailbox, false
}
localPartBytes := make([]byte, 0, len(in)/2)
if in[0] == '"' {
// Quoted-string = DQUOTE *qcontent DQUOTE
// non-whitespace-control = %d1-8 / %d11 / %d12 / %d14-31 / %d127
// qcontent = qtext / quoted-pair
// qtext = non-whitespace-control /
// %d33 / %d35-91 / %d93-126
// quoted-pair = ("\" text) / obs-qp
// text = %d1-9 / %d11 / %d12 / %d14-127 / obs-text
//
// (Names beginning with “obs-” are the obsolete syntax from RFC 2822,
// Section 4. Since it has been 16 years, we no longer accept that.)
in = in[1:]
QuotedString:
for {
if len(in) == 0 {
return mailbox, false
}
c := in[0]
in = in[1:]
switch {
case c == '"':
break QuotedString
case c == '\\':
// quoted-pair
if len(in) == 0 {
return mailbox, false
}
if in[0] == 11 ||
in[0] == 12 ||
(1 <= in[0] && in[0] <= 9) ||
(14 <= in[0] && in[0] <= 127) {
localPartBytes = append(localPartBytes, in[0])
in = in[1:]
} else {
return mailbox, false
}
case c == 11 ||
c == 12 ||
// Space (char 32) is not allowed based on the
// BNF, but RFC 3696 gives an example that
// assumes that it is. Several “verified”
// errata continue to argue about this point.
// We choose to accept it.
c == 32 ||
c == 33 ||
c == 127 ||
(1 <= c && c <= 8) ||
(14 <= c && c <= 31) ||
(35 <= c && c <= 91) ||
(93 <= c && c <= 126):
// qtext
localPartBytes = append(localPartBytes, c)
default:
return mailbox, false
}
}
} else {
// Atom ("." Atom)*
NextChar:
for len(in) > 0 {
// atext from RFC 2822, Section 3.2.4
c := in[0]
switch {
case c == '\\':
// Examples given in RFC 3696 suggest that
// escaped characters can appear outside of a
// quoted string. Several “verified” errata
// continue to argue the point. We choose to
// accept it.
in = in[1:]
if len(in) == 0 {
return mailbox, false
}
fallthrough
case ('0' <= c && c <= '9') ||
('a' <= c && c <= 'z') ||
('A' <= c && c <= 'Z') ||
c == '!' || c == '#' || c == '$' || c == '%' ||
c == '&' || c == '\'' || c == '*' || c == '+' ||
c == '-' || c == '/' || c == '=' || c == '?' ||
c == '^' || c == '_' || c == '`' || c == '{' ||
c == '|' || c == '}' || c == '~' || c == '.':
localPartBytes = append(localPartBytes, in[0])
in = in[1:]
default:
break NextChar
}
}
if len(localPartBytes) == 0 {
return mailbox, false
}
// From RFC 3696, Section 3:
// “period (".") may also appear, but may not be used to start
// or end the local part, nor may two or more consecutive
// periods appear.”
twoDots := []byte{'.', '.'}
if localPartBytes[0] == '.' ||
localPartBytes[len(localPartBytes)-1] == '.' ||
bytes.Contains(localPartBytes, twoDots) {
return mailbox, false
}
}
if len(in) == 0 || in[0] != '@' {
return mailbox, false
}
in = in[1:]
// The RFC species a format for domains, but that's known to be
// violated in practice so we accept that anything after an '@' is the
// domain part.
if _, ok := domainToReverseLabels(in); !ok {
return mailbox, false
}
mailbox.local = string(localPartBytes)
mailbox.domain = in
return mailbox, true
}
// domainToReverseLabels converts a textual domain name like foo.example.com to
// the list of labels in reverse order, e.g. ["com", "example", "foo"].
func domainToReverseLabels(domain string) (reverseLabels []string, ok bool) {
for len(domain) > 0 {
if i := strings.LastIndexByte(domain, '.'); i == -1 {
reverseLabels = append(reverseLabels, domain)
domain = ""
} else {
reverseLabels = append(reverseLabels, domain[i+1:])
domain = domain[:i]
}
}
if len(reverseLabels) > 0 && len(reverseLabels[0]) == 0 {
// An empty label at the end indicates an absolute value.
return nil, false
}
for _, label := range reverseLabels {
if len(label) == 0 {
// Empty labels are otherwise invalid.
return nil, false
}
for _, c := range label {
if c < 33 || c > 126 {
// Invalid character.
return nil, false
}
}
}
return reverseLabels, true
}
func matchEmailConstraint(mailbox rfc2821Mailbox, constraint string) (bool, error) {
// If the constraint contains an @, then it specifies an exact mailbox
// name.
if strings.Contains(constraint, "@") {
constraintMailbox, ok := parseRFC2821Mailbox(constraint)
if !ok {
return false, fmt.Errorf("x509: internal error: cannot parse constraint %q", constraint)
}
return mailbox.local == constraintMailbox.local && strings.EqualFold(mailbox.domain, constraintMailbox.domain), nil
}
// Otherwise the constraint is like a DNS constraint of the domain part
// of the mailbox.
return matchDomainConstraint(mailbox.domain, constraint)
}
func matchURIConstraint(uri *url.URL, constraint string) (bool, error) {
// From RFC 5280, Section 4.2.1.10:
// “a uniformResourceIdentifier that does not include an authority
// component with a host name specified as a fully qualified domain
// name (e.g., if the URI either does not include an authority
// component or includes an authority component in which the host name
// is specified as an IP address), then the application MUST reject the
// certificate.”
host := uri.Host
if len(host) == 0 {
return false, fmt.Errorf("URI with empty host (%q) cannot be matched against constraints", uri.String())
}
if strings.Contains(host, ":") && !strings.HasSuffix(host, "]") {
var err error
host, _, err = net.SplitHostPort(uri.Host)
if err != nil {
return false, err
}
}
if strings.HasPrefix(host, "[") && strings.HasSuffix(host, "]") ||
net.ParseIP(host) != nil {
return false, fmt.Errorf("URI with IP (%q) cannot be matched against constraints", uri.String())
}
return matchDomainConstraint(host, constraint)
}
func matchIPConstraint(ip net.IP, constraint *net.IPNet) (bool, error) {
if len(ip) != len(constraint.IP) {
return false, nil
}
for i := range ip {
if mask := constraint.Mask[i]; ip[i]&mask != constraint.IP[i]&mask {
return false, nil
}
}
return true, nil
}
func matchDomainConstraint(domain, constraint string) (bool, error) {
// The meaning of zero length constraints is not specified, but this
// code follows NSS and accepts them as matching everything.
if len(constraint) == 0 {
return true, nil
}
domainLabels, ok := domainToReverseLabels(domain)
if !ok {
return false, fmt.Errorf("x509: internal error: cannot parse domain %q", domain)
}
// RFC 5280 says that a leading period in a domain name means that at
// least one label must be prepended, but only for URI and email
// constraints, not DNS constraints. The code also supports that
// behaviour for DNS constraints.
mustHaveSubdomains := false
if constraint[0] == '.' {
mustHaveSubdomains = true
constraint = constraint[1:]
}
constraintLabels, ok := domainToReverseLabels(constraint)
if !ok {
return false, fmt.Errorf("x509: internal error: cannot parse domain %q", constraint)
}
if len(domainLabels) < len(constraintLabels) ||
(mustHaveSubdomains && len(domainLabels) == len(constraintLabels)) {
return false, nil
}
for i, constraintLabel := range constraintLabels {
if !strings.EqualFold(constraintLabel, domainLabels[i]) {
return false, nil
}
}
return true, nil
}
// checkNameConstraints checks that c permits a child certificate to claim the
// given name, of type nameType. The argument parsedName contains the parsed
// form of name, suitable for passing to the match function. The total number
// of comparisons is tracked in the given count and should not exceed the given
// limit.
func (c *Certificate) checkNameConstraints(count *int,
maxConstraintComparisons int,
nameType string,
name string,
parsedName interface{},
match func(parsedName, constraint interface{}) (match bool, err error),
permitted, excluded interface{}) error {
excludedValue := reflect.ValueOf(excluded)
*count += excludedValue.Len()
if *count > maxConstraintComparisons {
return CertificateInvalidError{c, TooManyConstraints, ""}
}
for i := 0; i < excludedValue.Len(); i++ {
constraint := excludedValue.Index(i).Interface()
match, err := match(parsedName, constraint)
if err != nil {
return CertificateInvalidError{c, CANotAuthorizedForThisName, err.Error()}
}
if match {
return CertificateInvalidError{c, CANotAuthorizedForThisName, fmt.Sprintf("%s %q is excluded by constraint %q", nameType, name, constraint)}
}
}
permittedValue := reflect.ValueOf(permitted)
*count += permittedValue.Len()
if *count > maxConstraintComparisons {
return CertificateInvalidError{c, TooManyConstraints, ""}
}
ok := true
for i := 0; i < permittedValue.Len(); i++ {
constraint := permittedValue.Index(i).Interface()
var err error
if ok, err = match(parsedName, constraint); err != nil {
return CertificateInvalidError{c, CANotAuthorizedForThisName, err.Error()}
}
if ok {
break
}
}
if !ok {
return CertificateInvalidError{c, CANotAuthorizedForThisName, fmt.Sprintf("%s %q is not permitted by any constraint", nameType, name)}
}
return nil
}
// isValid performs validity checks on c given that it is a candidate to append
// to the chain in currentChain.
func (c *Certificate) isValid(certType int, currentChain []*Certificate, opts *VerifyOptions) error {
if len(c.UnhandledCriticalExtensions) > 0 {
return UnhandledCriticalExtension{}
}
if len(currentChain) > 0 {
child := currentChain[len(currentChain)-1]
if !bytes.Equal(child.RawIssuer, c.RawSubject) {
return CertificateInvalidError{c, NameMismatch, ""}
}
}
now := opts.CurrentTime
if now.IsZero() {
now = time.Now()
}
if now.Before(c.NotBefore) {
return CertificateInvalidError{
Cert: c,
Reason: Expired,
Detail: fmt.Sprintf("current time %s is before %s", now.Format(time.RFC3339), c.NotBefore.Format(time.RFC3339)),
}
} else if now.After(c.NotAfter) {
return CertificateInvalidError{
Cert: c,
Reason: Expired,
Detail: fmt.Sprintf("current time %s is after %s", now.Format(time.RFC3339), c.NotAfter.Format(time.RFC3339)),
}
}
maxConstraintComparisons := opts.MaxConstraintComparisions
if maxConstraintComparisons == 0 {
maxConstraintComparisons = 250000
}
comparisonCount := 0
var leaf *Certificate
if certType == intermediateCertificate || certType == rootCertificate {
if len(currentChain) == 0 {
return errors.New("x509: internal error: empty chain when appending CA cert")
}
leaf = currentChain[0]
}
checkNameConstraints := (certType == intermediateCertificate || certType == rootCertificate) && c.hasNameConstraints()
if checkNameConstraints && leaf.commonNameAsHostname() {
// This is the deprecated, legacy case of depending on the commonName as
// a hostname. We don't enforce name constraints against the CN, but
// VerifyHostname will look for hostnames in there if there are no SANs.
// In order to ensure VerifyHostname will not accept an unchecked name,
// return an error here.
return CertificateInvalidError{c, NameConstraintsWithoutSANs, ""}
} else if checkNameConstraints && leaf.hasSANExtension() {
err := forEachSAN(leaf.getSANExtension(), func(tag int, data []byte) error {
switch tag {
case nameTypeEmail:
name := string(data)
mailbox, ok := parseRFC2821Mailbox(name)
if !ok {
return fmt.Errorf("x509: cannot parse rfc822Name %q", mailbox)
}
if err := c.checkNameConstraints(&comparisonCount, maxConstraintComparisons, "email address", name, mailbox,
func(parsedName, constraint interface{}) (bool, error) {
return matchEmailConstraint(parsedName.(rfc2821Mailbox), constraint.(string))
}, c.PermittedEmailAddresses, c.ExcludedEmailAddresses); err != nil {
return err
}
case nameTypeDNS:
name := string(data)
if _, ok := domainToReverseLabels(name); !ok {
return fmt.Errorf("x509: cannot parse dnsName %q", name)
}
if err := c.checkNameConstraints(&comparisonCount, maxConstraintComparisons, "DNS name", name, name,
func(parsedName, constraint interface{}) (bool, error) {
return matchDomainConstraint(parsedName.(string), constraint.(string))
}, c.PermittedDNSDomains, c.ExcludedDNSDomains); err != nil {
return err
}
case nameTypeURI:
name := string(data)
uri, err := url.Parse(name)
if err != nil {
return fmt.Errorf("x509: internal error: URI SAN %q failed to parse", name)
}
if err := c.checkNameConstraints(&comparisonCount, maxConstraintComparisons, "URI", name, uri,
func(parsedName, constraint interface{}) (bool, error) {
return matchURIConstraint(parsedName.(*url.URL), constraint.(string))
}, c.PermittedURIDomains, c.ExcludedURIDomains); err != nil {
return err
}
case nameTypeIP:
ip := net.IP(data)
if l := len(ip); l != net.IPv4len && l != net.IPv6len {
return fmt.Errorf("x509: internal error: IP SAN %x failed to parse", data)
}
if err := c.checkNameConstraints(&comparisonCount, maxConstraintComparisons, "IP address", ip.String(), ip,
func(parsedName, constraint interface{}) (bool, error) {
return matchIPConstraint(parsedName.(net.IP), constraint.(*net.IPNet))
}, c.PermittedIPRanges, c.ExcludedIPRanges); err != nil {
return err
}
default:
// Unknown SAN types are ignored.
}
return nil
})
if err != nil {
return err
}
}
// KeyUsage status flags are ignored. From Engineering Security, Peter
// Gutmann: A European government CA marked its signing certificates as
// being valid for encryption only, but no-one noticed. Another
// European CA marked its signature keys as not being valid for
// signatures. A different CA marked its own trusted root certificate
// as being invalid for certificate signing. Another national CA
// distributed a certificate to be used to encrypt data for the
// countrys tax authority that was marked as only being usable for
// digital signatures but not for encryption. Yet another CA reversed
// the order of the bit flags in the keyUsage due to confusion over
// encoding endianness, essentially setting a random keyUsage in
// certificates that it issued. Another CA created a self-invalidating
// certificate by adding a certificate policy statement stipulating
// that the certificate had to be used strictly as specified in the
// keyUsage, and a keyUsage containing a flag indicating that the RSA
// encryption key could only be used for Diffie-Hellman key agreement.
if certType == intermediateCertificate && (!c.BasicConstraintsValid || !c.IsCA) {
return CertificateInvalidError{c, NotAuthorizedToSign, ""}
}
if c.BasicConstraintsValid && c.MaxPathLen >= 0 {
numIntermediates := len(currentChain) - 1
if numIntermediates > c.MaxPathLen {
return CertificateInvalidError{c, TooManyIntermediates, ""}
}
}
return nil
}
// Verify attempts to verify c by building one or more chains from c to a
// certificate in opts.Roots, using certificates in opts.Intermediates if
// needed. If successful, it returns one or more chains where the first
// element of the chain is c and the last element is from opts.Roots.
//
// If opts.Roots is nil and system roots are unavailable the returned error
// will be of type SystemRootsError.
//
// Name constraints in the intermediates will be applied to all names claimed
// in the chain, not just opts.DNSName. Thus it is invalid for a leaf to claim
// example.com if an intermediate doesn't permit it, even if example.com is not
// the name being validated. Note that DirectoryName constraints are not
// supported.
//
// Extended Key Usage values are enforced down a chain, so an intermediate or
// root that enumerates EKUs prevents a leaf from asserting an EKU not in that
// list.
//
// WARNING: this function doesn't do any revocation checking.
func (c *Certificate) Verify(opts VerifyOptions) (chains [][]*Certificate, err error) {
// Platform-specific verification needs the ASN.1 contents so
// this makes the behavior consistent across platforms.
if len(c.Raw) == 0 {
return nil, errNotParsed
}
for i := 0; i < opts.Intermediates.len(); i++ {
c, err := opts.Intermediates.cert(i)
if err != nil {
return nil, fmt.Errorf("crypto/x509: error fetching cert: %w", err)
}
if len(c.Raw) == 0 {
return nil, errNotParsed
}
}
// Use Windows's own verification and chain building.
if opts.Roots == nil && runtime.GOOS == "windows" {
return c.systemVerify(&opts)
}
if opts.Roots == nil {
opts.Roots = systemRootsPool()
if opts.Roots == nil {
return nil, SystemRootsError{systemRootsErr}
}
}
err = c.isValid(leafCertificate, nil, &opts)
if err != nil {
return
}
if len(opts.DNSName) > 0 {
err = c.VerifyHostname(opts.DNSName)
if err != nil {
return
}
}
var candidateChains [][]*Certificate
if inRoots, err := opts.Roots.contains(c); inRoots {
candidateChains = append(candidateChains, []*Certificate{c})
} else if err != nil {
return nil, err
} else {
if candidateChains, err = c.buildChains(nil, []*Certificate{c}, nil, &opts); err != nil {
return nil, err
}
}
keyUsages := opts.KeyUsages
if len(keyUsages) == 0 {
keyUsages = []ExtKeyUsage{ExtKeyUsageServerAuth}
}
// If any key usage is acceptable then we're done.
for _, usage := range keyUsages {
if usage == ExtKeyUsageAny {
return candidateChains, nil
}
}
for _, candidate := range candidateChains {
if checkChainForKeyUsage(candidate, keyUsages) {
chains = append(chains, candidate)
}
}
if len(chains) == 0 {
return nil, CertificateInvalidError{c, IncompatibleUsage, ""}
}
return chains, nil
}
func appendToFreshChain(chain []*Certificate, cert *Certificate) []*Certificate {
n := make([]*Certificate, len(chain)+1)
copy(n, chain)
n[len(chain)] = cert
return n
}
// maxChainSignatureChecks is the maximum number of CheckSignatureFrom calls
// that an invocation of buildChains will (tranistively) make. Most chains are
// less than 15 certificates long, so this leaves space for multiple chains and
// for failed checks due to different intermediates having the same Subject.
const maxChainSignatureChecks = 100
func (c *Certificate) buildChains(cache map[*Certificate][][]*Certificate, currentChain []*Certificate, sigChecks *int, opts *VerifyOptions) (chains [][]*Certificate, err error) {
var (
hintErr error
hintCert *Certificate
)
considerCandidate := func(certType int, candidate *Certificate) {
for _, cert := range currentChain {
if cert.Equal(candidate) {
return
}
}
if sigChecks == nil {
sigChecks = new(int)
}
*sigChecks++
if *sigChecks > maxChainSignatureChecks {
err = errors.New("x509: signature check attempts limit reached while verifying certificate chain")
return
}
if err := c.CheckSignatureFrom(candidate); err != nil {
if hintErr == nil {
hintErr = err
hintCert = candidate
}
return
}
err = candidate.isValid(certType, currentChain, opts)
if err != nil {
return
}
switch certType {
case rootCertificate:
chains = append(chains, appendToFreshChain(currentChain, candidate))
case intermediateCertificate:
if cache == nil {
cache = make(map[*Certificate][][]*Certificate)
}
childChains, ok := cache[candidate]
if !ok {
childChains, err = candidate.buildChains(cache, appendToFreshChain(currentChain, candidate), sigChecks, opts)
cache[candidate] = childChains
}
chains = append(chains, childChains...)
}
}
for _, rootNum := range opts.Roots.findPotentialParents(c) {
c, err := opts.Roots.cert(rootNum)
if err != nil {
return nil, fmt.Errorf("crypto/x509: error fetching cert: %w", err)
}
considerCandidate(rootCertificate, c)
}
for _, intermediateNum := range opts.Intermediates.findPotentialParents(c) {
c, err := opts.Intermediates.cert(intermediateNum)
if err != nil {
return nil, fmt.Errorf("crypto/x509: error fetching cert: %w", err)
}
considerCandidate(intermediateCertificate, c)
}
if len(chains) > 0 {
err = nil
}
if len(chains) == 0 && err == nil {
err = UnknownAuthorityError{c, hintErr, hintCert}
}
return
}
// validHostname reports whether host is a valid hostname that can be matched or
// matched against according to RFC 6125 2.2, with some leniency to accommodate
// legacy values.
func validHostname(host string) bool {
host = strings.TrimSuffix(host, ".")
if len(host) == 0 {
return false
}
for i, part := range strings.Split(host, ".") {
if part == "" {
// Empty label.
return false
}
if i == 0 && part == "*" {
// Only allow full left-most wildcards, as those are the only ones
// we match, and matching literal '*' characters is probably never
// the expected behavior.
continue
}
for j, c := range part {
if 'a' <= c && c <= 'z' {
continue
}
if '0' <= c && c <= '9' {
continue
}
if 'A' <= c && c <= 'Z' {
continue
}
if c == '-' && j != 0 {
continue
}
if c == '_' || c == ':' {
// Not valid characters in hostnames, but commonly
// found in deployments outside the WebPKI.
continue
}
return false
}
}
return true
}
// commonNameAsHostname reports whether the Common Name field should be
// considered the hostname that the certificate is valid for. This is a legacy
// behavior, disabled if the Subject Alt Name extension is present.
//
// It applies the strict validHostname check to the Common Name field, so that
// certificates without SANs can still be validated against CAs with name
// constraints if there is no risk the CN would be matched as a hostname.
// See NameConstraintsWithoutSANs and issue 24151.
func (c *Certificate) commonNameAsHostname() bool {
return !ignoreCN && !c.hasSANExtension() && validHostname(c.Subject.CommonName)
}
func matchHostnames(pattern, host string) bool {
host = strings.TrimSuffix(host, ".")
pattern = strings.TrimSuffix(pattern, ".")
if len(pattern) == 0 || len(host) == 0 {
return false
}
patternParts := strings.Split(pattern, ".")
hostParts := strings.Split(host, ".")
if len(patternParts) != len(hostParts) {
return false
}
for i, patternPart := range patternParts {
if i == 0 && patternPart == "*" {
continue
}
if patternPart != hostParts[i] {
return false
}
}
return true
}
// toLowerCaseASCII returns a lower-case version of in. See RFC 6125 6.4.1. We use
// an explicitly ASCII function to avoid any sharp corners resulting from
// performing Unicode operations on DNS labels.
func toLowerCaseASCII(in string) string {
// If the string is already lower-case then there's nothing to do.
isAlreadyLowerCase := true
for _, c := range in {
if c == utf8.RuneError {
// If we get a UTF-8 error then there might be
// upper-case ASCII bytes in the invalid sequence.
isAlreadyLowerCase = false
break
}
if 'A' <= c && c <= 'Z' {
isAlreadyLowerCase = false
break
}
}
if isAlreadyLowerCase {
return in
}
out := []byte(in)
for i, c := range out {
if 'A' <= c && c <= 'Z' {
out[i] += 'a' - 'A'
}
}
return string(out)
}
// VerifyHostname returns nil if c is a valid certificate for the named host.
// Otherwise it returns an error describing the mismatch.
func (c *Certificate) VerifyHostname(h string) error {
// IP addresses may be written in [ ].
candidateIP := h
if len(h) >= 3 && h[0] == '[' && h[len(h)-1] == ']' {
candidateIP = h[1 : len(h)-1]
}
if ip := net.ParseIP(candidateIP); ip != nil {
// We only match IP addresses against IP SANs.
// See RFC 6125, Appendix B.2.
for _, candidate := range c.IPAddresses {
if ip.Equal(candidate) {
return nil
}
}
return HostnameError{c, candidateIP}
}
lowered := toLowerCaseASCII(h)
if c.commonNameAsHostname() {
if matchHostnames(toLowerCaseASCII(c.Subject.CommonName), lowered) {
return nil
}
} else {
for _, match := range c.DNSNames {
if matchHostnames(toLowerCaseASCII(match), lowered) {
return nil
}
}
}
return HostnameError{c, h}
}
func checkChainForKeyUsage(chain []*Certificate, keyUsages []ExtKeyUsage) bool {
usages := make([]ExtKeyUsage, len(keyUsages))
copy(usages, keyUsages)
if len(chain) == 0 {
return false
}
usagesRemaining := len(usages)
// We walk down the list and cross out any usages that aren't supported
// by each certificate. If we cross out all the usages, then the chain
// is unacceptable.
NextCert:
for i := len(chain) - 1; i >= 0; i-- {
cert := chain[i]
if len(cert.ExtKeyUsage) == 0 && len(cert.UnknownExtKeyUsage) == 0 {
// The certificate doesn't have any extended key usage specified.
continue
}
for _, usage := range cert.ExtKeyUsage {
if usage == ExtKeyUsageAny {
// The certificate is explicitly good for any usage.
continue NextCert
}
}
const invalidUsage ExtKeyUsage = -1
NextRequestedUsage:
for i, requestedUsage := range usages {
if requestedUsage == invalidUsage {
continue
}
for _, usage := range cert.ExtKeyUsage {
if requestedUsage == usage {
continue NextRequestedUsage
} else if requestedUsage == ExtKeyUsageServerAuth &&
(usage == ExtKeyUsageNetscapeServerGatedCrypto ||
usage == ExtKeyUsageMicrosoftServerGatedCrypto) {
// In order to support COMODO
// certificate chains, we have to
// accept Netscape or Microsoft SGC
// usages as equal to ServerAuth.
continue NextRequestedUsage
}
}
usages[i] = invalidUsage
usagesRemaining--
if usagesRemaining == 0 {
return false
}
}
}
return true
}