| // Copyright 2015 The Chromium Authors |
| // Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style license that can be |
| // found in the LICENSE file. |
| |
| #ifndef BSSL_PKI_VERIFY_CERTIFICATE_CHAIN_H_ |
| #define BSSL_PKI_VERIFY_CERTIFICATE_CHAIN_H_ |
| |
| #include <set> |
| |
| #include <openssl/base.h> |
| #include <openssl/evp.h> |
| |
| #include "cert_errors.h" |
| #include "input.h" |
| #include "parsed_certificate.h" |
| #include "signature_verify_cache.h" |
| |
| namespace bssl { |
| |
| namespace der { |
| struct GeneralizedTime; |
| } |
| |
| struct CertificateTrust; |
| |
| // The key purpose (extended key usage) to check for during verification. |
| enum class KeyPurpose { |
| ANY_EKU, |
| SERVER_AUTH, |
| CLIENT_AUTH, |
| SERVER_AUTH_STRICT, // Skip ANY_EKU when checking, require EKU present in |
| // certificate. |
| CLIENT_AUTH_STRICT, // Skip ANY_EKU when checking, require EKU present in |
| // certificate. |
| }; |
| |
| enum class InitialExplicitPolicy { |
| kFalse, |
| kTrue, |
| }; |
| |
| enum class InitialPolicyMappingInhibit { |
| kFalse, |
| kTrue, |
| }; |
| |
| enum class InitialAnyPolicyInhibit { |
| kFalse, |
| kTrue, |
| }; |
| |
| // VerifyCertificateChainDelegate exposes delegate methods used when verifying a |
| // chain. |
| class OPENSSL_EXPORT VerifyCertificateChainDelegate { |
| public: |
| // Implementations should return true if |signature_algorithm| is allowed for |
| // certificate signing, false otherwise. When returning false implementations |
| // can optionally add high-severity errors to |errors| with details on why it |
| // was rejected. |
| virtual bool IsSignatureAlgorithmAcceptable( |
| SignatureAlgorithm signature_algorithm, CertErrors *errors) = 0; |
| |
| // Implementations should return true if |public_key| is acceptable. This is |
| // called for each certificate in the chain, including the target certificate. |
| // When returning false implementations can optionally add high-severity |
| // errors to |errors| with details on why it was rejected. |
| // |
| // |public_key| can be assumed to be non-null. |
| virtual bool IsPublicKeyAcceptable(EVP_PKEY *public_key, |
| CertErrors *errors) = 0; |
| |
| // This is called during verification to obtain a pointer to a signature |
| // verification cache if one exists. nullptr may be returned indicating there |
| // is no verification cache. |
| virtual SignatureVerifyCache *GetVerifyCache() = 0; |
| |
| virtual ~VerifyCertificateChainDelegate(); |
| }; |
| |
| // VerifyCertificateChain() verifies an ordered certificate path in accordance |
| // with RFC 5280's "Certification Path Validation" algorithm (section 6). |
| // |
| // ----------------------------------------- |
| // Deviations from RFC 5280 |
| // ----------------------------------------- |
| // |
| // * If Extended Key Usage appears on intermediates, it is treated as |
| // a restriction on subordinate certificates. |
| // * No revocation checking is performed. |
| // |
| // ----------------------------------------- |
| // Additional responsibilities of the caller |
| // ----------------------------------------- |
| // |
| // After successful path verification, the caller is responsible for |
| // subsequently checking: |
| // |
| // * The end-entity's KeyUsage before using its SPKI. |
| // * The end-entity's name/subjectAltName. Name constraints from intermediates |
| // will have already been applied, so it is sufficient to check the |
| // end-entity for a match. The caller MUST NOT check hostnames on the |
| // commonName field because this implementation does not apply dnsName |
| // constraints on commonName. |
| // |
| // --------- |
| // Inputs |
| // --------- |
| // |
| // certs: |
| // A non-empty chain of DER-encoded certificates, listed in the |
| // "forward" direction. The first certificate is the target |
| // certificate to verify, and the last certificate has trustedness |
| // given by |last_cert_trust| (generally a trust anchor). |
| // |
| // * certs[0] is the target certificate to verify. |
| // * certs[i+1] holds the certificate that issued cert_chain[i]. |
| // * certs[N-1] the root certificate |
| // |
| // Note that THIS IS NOT identical in meaning to the same named |
| // "certs" input defined in RFC 5280 section 6.1.1.a. The differences |
| // are: |
| // |
| // * The order of certificates is reversed |
| // * In RFC 5280 "certs" DOES NOT include the trust anchor |
| // |
| // last_cert_trust: |
| // Trustedness of |certs.back()|. The trustedness of |certs.back()| |
| // MUST BE decided by the caller -- this function takes it purely as |
| // an input. Moreover, the CertificateTrust can be used to specify |
| // trust anchor constraints. |
| // |
| // This combined with |certs.back()| (the root certificate) fills a |
| // similar role to "trust anchor information" defined in RFC 5280 |
| // section 6.1.1.d. |
| // |
| // delegate: |
| // |delegate| must be non-null. It is used to answer policy questions such |
| // as whether a signature algorithm is acceptable, or a public key is strong |
| // enough. |
| // |
| // time: |
| // The UTC time to use for expiration checks. This is equivalent to |
| // the input from RFC 5280 section 6.1.1: |
| // |
| // (b) the current date/time. |
| // |
| // required_key_purpose: |
| // The key purpose that the target certificate needs to be valid for. |
| // |
| // user_initial_policy_set: |
| // This is equivalent to the same named input in RFC 5280 section |
| // 6.1.1: |
| // |
| // (c) user-initial-policy-set: A set of certificate policy |
| // identifiers naming the policies that are acceptable to the |
| // certificate user. The user-initial-policy-set contains the |
| // special value any-policy if the user is not concerned about |
| // certificate policy. |
| // |
| // initial_policy_mapping_inhibit: |
| // This is equivalent to the same named input in RFC 5280 section |
| // 6.1.1: |
| // |
| // (e) initial-policy-mapping-inhibit, which indicates if policy |
| // mapping is allowed in the certification path. |
| // |
| // initial_explicit_policy: |
| // This is equivalent to the same named input in RFC 5280 section |
| // 6.1.1: |
| // |
| // (f) initial-explicit-policy, which indicates if the path must be |
| // valid for at least one of the certificate policies in the |
| // user-initial-policy-set. |
| // |
| // initial_any_policy_inhibit: |
| // This is equivalent to the same named input in RFC 5280 section |
| // 6.1.1: |
| // |
| // (g) initial-any-policy-inhibit, which indicates whether the |
| // anyPolicy OID should be processed if it is included in a |
| // certificate. |
| // |
| // --------- |
| // Outputs |
| // --------- |
| // |
| // user_constrained_policy_set: |
| // Can be null. If non-null, |user_constrained_policy_set| will be filled |
| // with the matching policies (intersected with user_initial_policy_set). |
| // This is equivalent to the same named output in X.509 section 10.2. |
| // Note that it is OK for this to point to input user_initial_policy_set. |
| // |
| // errors: |
| // Must be non-null. The set of errors/warnings encountered while |
| // validating the path are appended to this structure. If verification |
| // failed, then there is guaranteed to be at least 1 high severity error |
| // written to |errors|. |
| // |
| // ------------------------- |
| // Trust Anchor constraints |
| // ------------------------- |
| // |
| // Conceptually, VerifyCertificateChain() sets RFC 5937's |
| // "enforceTrustAnchorConstraints" to true. |
| // |
| // One specifies trust anchor constraints using the |last_cert_trust| |
| // parameter in conjunction with extensions appearing in |certs.back()|. |
| // |
| // The trust anchor |certs.back()| is always passed as a certificate to |
| // this function, however the manner in which that certificate is |
| // interpreted depends on |last_cert_trust|: |
| // |
| // TRUSTED_ANCHOR: |
| // |
| // No properties from the root certificate, other than its Subject and |
| // SPKI, are checked during verification. This is the usual |
| // interpretation for a "trust anchor". |
| // |
| // enforce_anchor_expiry=true: |
| // |
| // The validity period of the root is checked, in addition to Subject and SPKI. |
| // |
| // enforce_anchor_constraints=true: |
| // |
| // Only a subset of extensions and properties from the certificate are checked. |
| // In general, constraints encoded by extensions are only enforced if the |
| // extension is present. |
| // |
| // * Signature: No |
| // * Validity (expiration): No |
| // * Key usage: Yes |
| // * Extended key usage: Yes (required if required_key_purpose is STRICT) |
| // * Basic constraints: Yes |
| // * Name constraints: Yes |
| // * Certificate policies: Yes |
| // * Policy Mappings: Yes |
| // * inhibitAnyPolicy: Yes |
| // * PolicyConstraints: Yes |
| // |
| // The presence of any other unrecognized extension marked as critical fails |
| // validation. |
| OPENSSL_EXPORT void VerifyCertificateChain( |
| const ParsedCertificateList &certs, const CertificateTrust &last_cert_trust, |
| VerifyCertificateChainDelegate *delegate, const der::GeneralizedTime &time, |
| KeyPurpose required_key_purpose, |
| InitialExplicitPolicy initial_explicit_policy, |
| const std::set<der::Input> &user_initial_policy_set, |
| InitialPolicyMappingInhibit initial_policy_mapping_inhibit, |
| InitialAnyPolicyInhibit initial_any_policy_inhibit, |
| std::set<der::Input> *user_constrained_policy_set, CertPathErrors *errors); |
| |
| // Returns true if `cert` is self-signed. Returns false `cert` is not |
| // self-signed or there was an error. If `errors` is non-null, it will contain |
| // additional information about the problem. If `cache` is non-null, it will be |
| // used to cache the signature verification step. |
| OPENSSL_EXPORT bool VerifyCertificateIsSelfSigned(const ParsedCertificate &cert, |
| SignatureVerifyCache *cache, |
| CertErrors *errors); |
| |
| } // namespace bssl |
| |
| #endif // BSSL_PKI_VERIFY_CERTIFICATE_CHAIN_H_ |