freeipa/ipapython/nsslib.py
Martin Kosek 4879c68d68 Improve address family handling in sockets
Many functions use low-level socket interface for connection or
various checks. However, most of the time we don't respect
automatic address family detection but rather try to force our
values. This may cause either redundat connection tries when an
address family is disabled on system tries or even crashes
when socket exceptions are not properly caught.

Instead of forcing address families to socket, rather use
getaddrinfo interface to automatically retrieve a list of all
relevant address families and other connection settings when
connecting to remote/local machine or binding to a local port.
Now, we will also fill correctly all connection parameters like
flowinfo and scopeid for IPv6 connections which will for example
prevent issues with scoped IPv6 addresses.

bind_port_responder function was changed to at first try to bind
to IPv6 wildcard address before IPv4 as IPv6 socket is able to
accept both IPv4 and IPv6 connections (unlike IPv4 socket).

nsslib connection was refactored to use nss.io.AddrInfo class to
get all the available connections. Socket is now not created by
default in NSSConnection class initializer, but rather when the
actual connection is being made, becase we do not an address family
where connection is successful.

https://fedorahosted.org/freeipa/ticket/2913
https://fedorahosted.org/freeipa/ticket/2695
2012-07-13 14:25:18 +02:00

327 lines
13 KiB
Python

# Authors: Rob Crittenden <rcritten@redhat.com>
# John Dennis <jdennis@redhat.com>
#
# Copyright (C) 2009 Red Hat
# see file 'COPYING' for use and warranty information
#
# This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
# it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
# the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
# (at your option) any later version.
#
# This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
# but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
# MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
# GNU General Public License for more details.
#
# You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
# along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
#
import sys
import httplib
import getpass
import socket
from ipapython.ipa_log_manager import *
from nss.error import NSPRError
import nss.io as io
import nss.nss as nss
import nss.ssl as ssl
import nss.error as error
def auth_certificate_callback(sock, check_sig, is_server, certdb):
cert_is_valid = False
cert = sock.get_peer_certificate()
root_logger.debug("auth_certificate_callback: check_sig=%s is_server=%s\n%s",
check_sig, is_server, str(cert))
pin_args = sock.get_pkcs11_pin_arg()
if pin_args is None:
pin_args = ()
# Define how the cert is being used based upon the is_server flag. This may
# seem backwards, but isn't. If we're a server we're trying to validate a
# client cert. If we're a client we're trying to validate a server cert.
if is_server:
intended_usage = nss.certificateUsageSSLClient
else:
intended_usage = nss.certificateUsageSSLServer
try:
# If the cert fails validation it will raise an exception, the errno attribute
# will be set to the error code matching the reason why the validation failed
# and the strerror attribute will contain a string describing the reason.
approved_usage = cert.verify_now(certdb, check_sig, intended_usage, *pin_args)
except Exception, e:
root_logger.error('cert validation failed for "%s" (%s)', cert.subject, e.strerror)
cert_is_valid = False
return cert_is_valid
root_logger.debug("approved_usage = %s intended_usage = %s",
', '.join(nss.cert_usage_flags(approved_usage)),
', '.join(nss.cert_usage_flags(intended_usage)))
# Is the intended usage a proper subset of the approved usage
if approved_usage & intended_usage:
cert_is_valid = True
else:
cert_is_valid = False
# If this is a server, we're finished
if is_server or not cert_is_valid:
root_logger.debug('cert valid %s for "%s"', cert_is_valid, cert.subject)
return cert_is_valid
# Certificate is OK. Since this is the client side of an SSL
# connection, we need to verify that the name field in the cert
# matches the desired hostname. This is our defense against
# man-in-the-middle attacks.
hostname = sock.get_hostname()
try:
# If the cert fails validation it will raise an exception
cert_is_valid = cert.verify_hostname(hostname)
except Exception, e:
root_logger.error('failed verifying socket hostname "%s" matches cert subject "%s" (%s)',
hostname, cert.subject, e.strerror)
cert_is_valid = False
return cert_is_valid
root_logger.debug('cert valid %s for "%s"', cert_is_valid, cert.subject)
return cert_is_valid
def client_auth_data_callback(ca_names, chosen_nickname, password, certdb):
cert = None
if chosen_nickname:
try:
cert = nss.find_cert_from_nickname(chosen_nickname, password)
priv_key = nss.find_key_by_any_cert(cert, password)
return cert, priv_key
except NSPRError:
return False
else:
nicknames = nss.get_cert_nicknames(certdb, nss.SEC_CERT_NICKNAMES_USER)
for nickname in nicknames:
try:
cert = nss.find_cert_from_nickname(nickname, password)
if cert.check_valid_times():
if cert.has_signer_in_ca_names(ca_names):
priv_key = nss.find_key_by_any_cert(cert, password)
return cert, priv_key
except NSPRError:
return False
return False
_af_dict = {
socket.AF_INET: io.PR_AF_INET,
socket.AF_INET6: io.PR_AF_INET6,
socket.AF_UNSPEC: io.PR_AF_UNSPEC
}
class NSSAddressFamilyFallback(object):
def __init__(self, family):
self.sock_family = family
self.family = self._get_nss_family(self.sock_family)
def _get_nss_family(self, sock_family):
"""
Translate a family from python socket module to nss family.
"""
try:
return _af_dict[sock_family]
except KeyError:
raise ValueError('Uknown socket family %d\n', sock_family)
def _create_socket(self):
self.sock = io.Socket(family=self.family)
def connect_socket(self, host, port):
try:
addr_info = io.AddrInfo(host, family=self.family)
except Exception:
raise NSPRError(error.PR_ADDRESS_NOT_SUPPORTED_ERROR,
"Cannot resolve %s using family %s" % (host,
io.addr_family_name(self.family)))
for net_addr in addr_info:
root_logger.debug("Connecting: %s", net_addr)
net_addr.port = port
self.family = net_addr.family
try:
self._create_socket()
self.sock.connect(net_addr)
return
except Exception, e:
root_logger.debug("Could not connect socket to %s, error: %s",
net_addr, str(e))
root_logger.debug("Try to continue with next family...")
continue
raise NSPRError(error.PR_ADDRESS_NOT_SUPPORTED_ERROR,
"Could not connect to %s using any address" % host)
class NSSConnection(httplib.HTTPConnection, NSSAddressFamilyFallback):
default_port = httplib.HTTPSConnection.default_port
def __init__(self, host, port=None, strict=None,
dbdir=None, family=socket.AF_UNSPEC, no_init=False):
"""
:param host: the server to connect to
:param port: the port to use (default is set in HTTPConnection)
:param dbdir: the NSS database directory
:param family: network family to use (default AF_UNSPEC)
:param no_init: do not initialize the NSS database. This requires
that the database has already been initialized or
the request will fail.
"""
httplib.HTTPConnection.__init__(self, host, port, strict)
NSSAddressFamilyFallback.__init__(self, family)
if not dbdir:
raise RuntimeError("dbdir is required")
root_logger.debug('%s init %s', self.__class__.__name__, host)
if not no_init and nss.nss_is_initialized():
# close any open NSS database and use the new one
ssl.clear_session_cache()
try:
nss.nss_shutdown()
except NSPRError, e:
if e.errno != error.SEC_ERROR_NOT_INITIALIZED:
raise e
nss.nss_init(dbdir)
ssl.set_domestic_policy()
nss.set_password_callback(self.password_callback)
def _create_socket(self):
# TODO: remove the try block once python-nss is guaranteed to contain
# these values
try :
ssl_enable_renegotiation = SSL_ENABLE_RENEGOTIATION #pylint: disable=E0602
ssl_require_safe_negotiation = SSL_REQUIRE_SAFE_NEGOTIATION #pylint: disable=E0602
ssl_renegotiate_requires_xtn = SSL_RENEGOTIATE_REQUIRES_XTN #pylint: disable=E0602
except :
ssl_enable_renegotiation = 20
ssl_require_safe_negotiation = 21
ssl_renegotiate_requires_xtn = 2
# Create the socket here so we can do things like let the caller
# override the NSS callbacks
self.sock = ssl.SSLSocket(family=self.family)
self.sock.set_ssl_option(ssl.SSL_SECURITY, True)
self.sock.set_ssl_option(ssl.SSL_HANDSHAKE_AS_CLIENT, True)
self.sock.set_ssl_option(ssl_require_safe_negotiation, False)
self.sock.set_ssl_option(ssl_enable_renegotiation, ssl_renegotiate_requires_xtn)
# Provide a callback which notifies us when the SSL handshake is complete
self.sock.set_handshake_callback(self.handshake_callback)
# Provide a callback to verify the servers certificate
self.sock.set_auth_certificate_callback(auth_certificate_callback,
nss.get_default_certdb())
self.sock.set_hostname(self.host)
def password_callback(self, slot, retry, password):
if not retry and password: return password
return getpass.getpass("Enter password for %s: " % slot.token_name);
def handshake_callback(self, sock):
"""
Verify callback. If we get here then the certificate is ok.
"""
root_logger.debug("handshake complete, peer = %s", sock.get_peer_name())
pass
def connect(self):
self.connect_socket(self.host, self.port)
def endheaders(self, message=None):
"""
Explicitly close the connection if an error is returned after the
headers are sent. This will likely mean the initial SSL handshake
failed. If this isn't done then the connection is never closed and
subsequent NSS activities will fail with a BUSY error.
"""
try:
# FIXME: httplib uses old-style classes so super doesn't work
# Python 2.7 changed the API for endheaders. This is an attempt
# to work across versions
(major, minor, micro, releaselevel, serial) = sys.version_info
if major == 2 and minor < 7:
httplib.HTTPConnection.endheaders(self)
else:
httplib.HTTPConnection.endheaders(self, message)
except NSPRError, e:
self.close()
raise e
class NSSHTTPS(httplib.HTTP):
# We would like to use HTTP 1.1 not the older HTTP 1.0 but xmlrpclib
# and httplib do not play well together. httplib when the protocol
# is 1.1 will add a host header in the request. But xmlrpclib
# always adds a host header irregardless of the HTTP protocol
# version. That means the request ends up with 2 host headers,
# but Apache freaks out if it sees 2 host headers, a known Apache
# issue. httplib has a mechanism to skip adding the host header
# (i.e. skip_host in HTTPConnection.putrequest()) but xmlrpclib
# doesn't use it. Oh well, back to 1.0 :-(
#
#_http_vsn = 11
#_http_vsn_str = 'HTTP/1.1'
_connection_class = NSSConnection
def __init__(self, host='', port=None, strict=None, dbdir=None, no_init=False):
# provide a default host, pass the X509 cert info
# urf. compensate for bad input.
if port == 0:
port = None
self._setup(self._connection_class(host, port, strict, dbdir=dbdir, no_init=no_init))
def getreply(self):
"""
Override so we can close duplicated file connection on non-200
responses. This was causing nss_shutdown() to fail with a busy
error.
"""
(status, reason, msg) = httplib.HTTP.getreply(self)
if status != 200:
self.file.close()
return (status, reason, msg)
#------------------------------------------------------------------------------
if __name__ == "__main__":
standard_logging_setup('nsslib.log', debug=True, filemode='a')
root_logger.info("Start")
if False:
conn = NSSConnection("www.verisign.com", 443, dbdir="/etc/pki/nssdb")
conn.set_debuglevel(1)
conn.connect()
conn.request("GET", "/")
response = conn.getresponse()
print response.status
#print response.msg
print response.getheaders()
data = response.read()
#print data
conn.close()
if True:
h = NSSHTTPS("www.verisign.com", 443, dbdir="/etc/pki/nssdb")
h.connect()
h.putrequest('GET', '/')
h.endheaders()
http_status, http_reason, headers = h.getreply()
print "status = %s %s" % (http_status, http_reason)
print "headers:\n%s" % headers
f = h.getfile()
data = f.read() # Get the raw HTML
f.close()
#print data