DST algorithm and DNSSEC algorithm values are not necessarily the same
anymore: if the DNSSEC algorithm value is PRIVATEOID or PRIVATEDNS, then
the DST algorithm will be mapped to something else. The conversion is
now done correctly where necessary.
The `max-rsa-exponent-size` could limit the exponents of the RSA
public keys during the DNSSEC verification. Instead of providing
a cryptic (not cryptographic) knob, hardcode the max exponent to
be 4096 (the theoretical maximum for DNSSEC).
The DST API has been cleaned up, duplicate functions has been squashed
into single call (verify and verify2 functions), and couple of unused
functions have been completely removed (createctx2, computesecret,
paramcompare, and cleanup).
Instead of relying on unreliable order of execution of the library
constructors and destructors, move them to individual binaries. The
advantage is that the execution time and order will remain constant and
will not depend on the dynamic load dependency solver.
This requires more work, but that was mitigated by a simple requirement,
any executable using libisc and libdns, must include <isc/lib.h> and
<dns/lib.h> respectively (in this particular order). In turn, these two
headers must not be included from within any library as they contain
inlined functions marked with constructor/destructor attributes.
Since BIND 9 headers are not longer public, there's no reason to keep
the ISC_LANG_BEGINDECL and ISC_LANG_ENDDECL macros to support including
them from C++ projects.
Remove the complicated mechanism that could be (in theory) used by
external libraries to register new categories and modules with
statically defined lists in <isc/log.h>. This is similar to what we
have done for <isc/result.h> result codes. All the libraries are now
internal to BIND 9, so we don't need to provide a mechanism to register
extra categories and modules.
Instead of calling dst_lib_init() and dst_lib_destroy() explicitly by
all the programs, create a separate memory context for the DST subsystem
and use the library constructor and destructor to initialize the DST
internals.
The OpenSSL 1.x Engines support has been deprecated in the OpenSSL 3.x
and is going to be removed. Remove the OpenSSL Engine support in favor
of OpenSSL Providers.
Since the minimal OpenSSL version is now OpenSSL 1.1.1, remove all kind
of OpenSSL shims and checks for functions that are now always present in
the OpenSSL libraries.
Co-authored-by: Ondřej Surý <ondrej@isc.org>
Co-authored-by: Aydın Mercan <aydin@isc.org>
The pkcs11-provider has changed to take a PKCS#11 URI instead of an
object identifier. Change the BIND 9 code accordingly to pass through
the label instead of just the object identifier.
See: https://github.com/latchset/pkcs11-provider/pull/284
The isc_fsaccess API was created to hide the implementation details
between POSIX and Windows APIs. As we are not supporting the Windows
APIs anymore, it's better to drop this API used in the DST part.
Moreover, the isc_fsaccess was setting the permissions in an insecure
manner - it operated on the filename, and not on the file descriptor
which can lead to all kind of attacks if unpriviledged user has read (or
even worse write) access to key directory.
Replace the code that operates on the private keys with code that uses
mkstemp(), fchmod() and atomic rename() at the end, so at no time the
private key files have insecure permissions.
Completely remove the TKEY Mode 2 (Diffie-Hellman Exchanged Keying) from
BIND 9 (from named, named.conf and all the tools). The TKEY usage is
fringe at best and in all known cases, GSSAPI is being used as it should.
The draft-eastlake-dnsop-rfc2930bis-tkey specifies that:
4.2 Diffie-Hellman Exchanged Keying (Deprecated)
The use of this mode (#2) is NOT RECOMMENDED for the following two
reasons but the specification is still included in Appendix A in case
an implementation is needed for compatibility with old TKEY
implementations. See Section 4.6 on ECDH Exchanged Keying.
The mixing function used does not meet current cryptographic
standards because it uses MD5 [RFC6151].
RSA keys must be excessively long to achieve levels of security
required by current standards.
We might optionally implement Elliptic Curve Diffie-Hellman (ECDH) key
exchange mode 6 if the draft ever reaches the RFC status. Meanwhile the
insecure DH mode needs to be removed.
Instead of trying to enforce one pkey to contain both a private
and a public key pair, refactor the code to have separate public
and private pkeys.
This is a prerequisite for proper openssl 3.0 providers support
and greatly simplifies the code.
Add a new parameter to the dst_key structure, mark a key modified if
dst_key_(un)set[bool,num,state,time] is called. Only write out key
files during a keymgr run if the metadata has changed.
This commit converts the license handling to adhere to the REUSE
specification. It specifically:
1. Adds used licnses to LICENSES/ directory
2. Add "isc" template for adding the copyright boilerplate
3. Changes all source files to include copyright and SPDX license
header, this includes all the C sources, documentation, zone files,
configuration files. There are notes in the doc/dev/copyrights file
on how to add correct headers to the new files.
4. Handle the rest that can't be modified via .reuse/dep5 file. The
binary (or otherwise unmodifiable) files could have license places
next to them in <foo>.license file, but this would lead to cluttered
repository and most of the files handled in the .reuse/dep5 file are
system test files.
The native PKCS#11 support has been removed in favour of better
maintained, more performance and easier to use OpenSSL PKCS#11 engine
from the OpenSC project.
Since we now require both libcrypto and libssl to be initialized for
netmgr, we move all the OpenSSL initialization code except the engine
initialization to isc_tls API.
The isc_tls_initialize() and isc_tls_destroy() has been made idempotent,
so they could be called multiple time. However when isc_tls_destroy()
has been called, the isc_tls_initialize() could not be called again.
The only reason for including the gssapi.h from the dst/gssapi.h header
was to get the typedefs of gss_cred_id_t and gss_ctx_id_t. Instead of
using those types directly this commit introduces dns_gss_cred_id_t and
dns_gss_ctx_id_t types that are being used in the public API and
privately retyped to their counterparts when we actually call the gss
api.
This also conceals the gssapi headers, so users of the libdns library
doesn't have to add GSSAPI_CFLAGS to the Makefile when including libdns
dst API.
The rewrite of BIND 9 build system is a large work and cannot be reasonable
split into separate merge requests. Addition of the automake has a positive
effect on the readability and maintainability of the build system as it is more
declarative, it allows conditional and we are able to drop all of the custom
make code that BIND 9 developed over the years to overcome the deficiencies of
autoconf + custom Makefile.in files.
This squashed commit contains following changes:
- conversion (or rather fresh rewrite) of all Makefile.in files to Makefile.am
by using automake
- the libtool is now properly integrated with automake (the way we used it
was rather hackish as the only official way how to use libtool is via
automake
- the dynamic module loading was rewritten from a custom patchwork to libtool's
libltdl (which includes the patchwork to support module loading on different
systems internally)
- conversion of the unit test executor from kyua to automake parallel driver
- conversion of the system test executor from custom make/shell to automake
parallel driver
- The GSSAPI has been refactored, the custom SPNEGO on the basis that
all major KRB5/GSSAPI (mit-krb5, heimdal and Windows) implementations
support SPNEGO mechanism.
- The various defunct tests from bin/tests have been removed:
bin/tests/optional and bin/tests/pkcs11
- The text files generated from the MD files have been removed, the
MarkDown has been designed to be readable by both humans and computers
- The xsl header is now generated by a simple sed command instead of
perl helper
- The <irs/platform.h> header has been removed
- cleanups of configure.ac script to make it more simpler, addition of multiple
macros (there's still work to be done though)
- the tarball can now be prepared with `make dist`
- the system tests are partially able to run in oot build
Here's a list of unfinished work that needs to be completed in subsequent merge
requests:
- `make distcheck` doesn't yet work (because of system tests oot run is not yet
finished)
- documentation is not yet built, there's a different merge request with docbook
to sphinx-build rst conversion that needs to be rebased and adapted on top of
the automake
- msvc build is non functional yet and we need to decide whether we will just
cross-compile bind9 using mingw-w64 or fix the msvc build
- contributed dlz modules are not included neither in the autoconf nor automake
Introduce a new option '-s' for dnssec-settime that when manipulating
timing metadata, it also updates the key state file.
For testing purposes, add options to dnssec-settime to set key
states and when they last changed.
The dst code adds ways to write and read the new key states and
timing metadata. It updates the parsing code for private key files
to not parse the newly introduced metadata (these are for state
files only).
Introduce key goal (the state the key wants to be in).
Add a number of metadata variables (lifetime, ksk and zsk role).
For the roles we add a new type of metadata (booleans).
Add a function to write the state of the key to a separate file.
Only write out known metadata to private file. With the
introduction of the numeric metadata "Lifetime", adjust the write
private key file functionality to only write out metadata it knows
about.
- Replace external -DOPENSSL/-DPKCS11CRYPTO with properly AC_DEFINEd
HAVE_OPENSSL/HAVE_PKCS11
- Don't enforce the crypto provider from platform.h, just from dst_api.c
and configure scripts
The three functions has been modeled after the arc4random family of
functions, and they will always return random bytes.
The isc_random family of functions internally use these CSPRNG (if available):
1. getrandom() libc call (might be available on Linux and Solaris)
2. SYS_getrandom syscall (might be available on Linux, detected at runtime)
3. arc4random(), arc4random_buf() and arc4random_uniform() (available on BSDs and Mac OS X)
4. crypto library function:
4a. RAND_bytes in case OpenSSL
4b. pkcs_C_GenerateRandom() in case PKCS#11 library