commit | 5c4271f7cb17edd8c6be1c841cd99991deaecd4b | [log] [tgz] |
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author | David Benjamin <davidben@google.com> | Wed Aug 23 22:09:41 2017 -0700 |
committer | CQ bot account: commit-bot@chromium.org <commit-bot@chromium.org> | Thu Aug 24 16:14:22 2017 +0000 |
tree | db9b3b41c4ebafadeedf41b59d52f7b8c3345d9e | |
parent | 5ef40c60f67e9060b33f02f49b366f508c0d09fa [diff] |
Don't reauthenticate on renegotiation. We currently forbid the server certificate from changing on renegotiation. This means re-verifying the certificate is pointless and indeed the callback being called again seems to surprise consumers more than anything else. Carry over the initial handshake's SCT lists and OCSP responses (don't enforce they don't change since the server may have, say, picked up new OCSP responses in the meantime), ignore new ones received on renegotiation, and don't bother redoing verification. For our purposes, TLS 1.2 renegotiation is an overcomplicated TLS 1.3 KeyUpdate + post-handshake auth. The server is not allowed to change identity. Bug: 126 Change-Id: I0dae85bcf243943b1a5a97fa4f30f100c9e6e41e Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/19665 Commit-Queue: Adam Langley <agl@google.com> Reviewed-by: Adam Langley <agl@google.com> CQ-Verified: CQ bot account: commit-bot@chromium.org <commit-bot@chromium.org>
BoringSSL is a fork of OpenSSL that is designed to meet Google's needs.
Although BoringSSL is an open source project, it is not intended for general use, as OpenSSL is. We don't recommend that third parties depend upon it. Doing so is likely to be frustrating because there are no guarantees of API or ABI stability.
Programs ship their own copies of BoringSSL when they use it and we update everything as needed when deciding to make API changes. This allows us to mostly avoid compromises in the name of compatibility. It works for us, but it may not work for you.
BoringSSL arose because Google used OpenSSL for many years in various ways and, over time, built up a large number of patches that were maintained while tracking upstream OpenSSL. As Google's product portfolio became more complex, more copies of OpenSSL sprung up and the effort involved in maintaining all these patches in multiple places was growing steadily.
Currently BoringSSL is the SSL library in Chrome/Chromium, Android (but it's not part of the NDK) and a number of other apps/programs.
There are other files in this directory which might be helpful: