Documentation ¶
Overview ¶
Package ocsp parses OCSP responses as specified in RFC 2560. OCSP responses are signed messages attesting to the validity of a certificate for a small period of time. This is used to manage revocation for X.509 certificates.
Index ¶
- Constants
- Variables
- func CreateRequest(cert, issuer *x509.Certificate, opts *RequestOptions) ([]byte, error)
- func CreateResponse(issuer, responderCert *x509.Certificate, template Response, priv crypto.Signer) ([]byte, error)
- type ParseError
- type Request
- type RequestOptions
- type Response
- type ResponseError
- type ResponseStatus
Constants ¶
const ( // Good means that the certificate is valid. Good = iota // Revoked means that the certificate has been deliberately revoked. Revoked // Unknown means that the OCSP responder doesn't know about the certificate. Unknown // ServerFailed is unused and was never used (see // https://go-review.googlesource.com/#/c/18944). ParseResponse will // return a ResponseError when an error response is parsed. ServerFailed )
The status values that can be expressed in OCSP. See RFC 6960.
const ( Unspecified = 0 KeyCompromise = 1 CACompromise = 2 AffiliationChanged = 3 Superseded = 4 CessationOfOperation = 5 CertificateHold = 6 RemoveFromCRL = 8 PrivilegeWithdrawn = 9 AACompromise = 10 )
The enumerated reasons for revoking a certificate. See RFC 5280.
Variables ¶
var ( MalformedRequestErrorResponse = []byte{0x30, 0x03, 0x0A, 0x01, 0x01} InternalErrorErrorResponse = []byte{0x30, 0x03, 0x0A, 0x01, 0x02} TryLaterErrorResponse = []byte{0x30, 0x03, 0x0A, 0x01, 0x03} SigRequredErrorResponse = []byte{0x30, 0x03, 0x0A, 0x01, 0x05} )
These are pre-serialized error responses for the various non-success codes defined by OCSP. The Unauthorized code in particular can be used by an OCSP responder that supports only pre-signed responses as a response to requests for certificates with unknown status. See RFC 5019.
Functions ¶
func CreateRequest ¶
func CreateRequest(cert, issuer *x509.Certificate, opts *RequestOptions) ([]byte, error)
CreateRequest returns a DER-encoded, OCSP request for the status of cert. If opts is nil then sensible defaults are used.
func CreateResponse ¶
func CreateResponse(issuer, responderCert *x509.Certificate, template Response, priv crypto.Signer) ([]byte, error)
CreateResponse returns a DER-encoded OCSP response with the specified contents. The fields in the response are populated as follows:
The responder cert is used to populate the responder's name field, and the certificate itself is provided alongside the OCSP response signature.
The issuer cert is used to populate the IssuerNameHash and IssuerKeyHash fields.
The template is used to populate the SerialNumber, Status, RevokedAt, RevocationReason, ThisUpdate, and NextUpdate fields.
If template.IssuerHash is not set, SHA1 will be used.
The ProducedAt date is automatically set to the current date, to the nearest minute.
Types ¶
type ParseError ¶
type ParseError string
ParseError results from an invalid OCSP response.
func (ParseError) Error ¶
func (p ParseError) Error() string
type Request ¶
type Request struct { HashAlgorithm crypto.Hash IssuerNameHash []byte IssuerKeyHash []byte SerialNumber *big.Int }
Request represents an OCSP request. See RFC 6960.
func ParseRequest ¶
ParseRequest parses an OCSP request in DER form. It only supports requests for a single certificate. Signed requests are not supported. If a request includes a signature, it will result in a ParseError.
type RequestOptions ¶
type RequestOptions struct { // Hash contains the hash function that should be used when // constructing the OCSP request. If zero, SHA-1 will be used. Hash crypto.Hash }
RequestOptions contains options for constructing OCSP requests.
type Response ¶
type Response struct { Raw []byte // Status is one of {Good, Revoked, Unknown} Status int SerialNumber *big.Int ProducedAt, ThisUpdate, NextUpdate, RevokedAt time.Time RevocationReason int Certificate *x509.Certificate // TBSResponseData contains the raw bytes of the signed response. If // Certificate is nil then this can be used to verify Signature. TBSResponseData []byte Signature []byte SignatureAlgorithm x509.SignatureAlgorithm // IssuerHash is the hash used to compute the IssuerNameHash and IssuerKeyHash. // Valid values are crypto.SHA1, crypto.SHA256, crypto.SHA384, and crypto.SHA512. // If zero, the default is crypto.SHA1. IssuerHash crypto.Hash // RawResponderName optionally contains the DER-encoded subject of the // responder certificate. Exactly one of RawResponderName and // ResponderKeyHash is set. RawResponderName []byte // ResponderKeyHash optionally contains the SHA-1 hash of the // responder's public key. Exactly one of RawResponderName and // ResponderKeyHash is set. ResponderKeyHash []byte // Extensions contains raw X.509 extensions from the singleExtensions field // of the OCSP response. When parsing certificates, this can be used to // extract non-critical extensions that are not parsed by this package. When // marshaling OCSP responses, the Extensions field is ignored, see // ExtraExtensions. Extensions []pkix.Extension // ExtraExtensions contains extensions to be copied, raw, into any marshaled // OCSP response (in the singleExtensions field). Values override any // extensions that would otherwise be produced based on the other fields. The // ExtraExtensions field is not populated when parsing certificates, see // Extensions. ExtraExtensions []pkix.Extension }
Response represents an OCSP response containing a single SingleResponse. See RFC 6960.
func ParseResponse ¶
func ParseResponse(bytes []byte, issuer *x509.Certificate) (*Response, error)
ParseResponse parses an OCSP response in DER form. The response must contain only one certificate status. To parse the status of a specific certificate from a response which may contain multiple statuses, use ParseResponseForCert instead.
If the response contains an embedded certificate, then that certificate will be used to verify the response signature. If the response contains an embedded certificate and issuer is not nil, then issuer will be used to verify the signature on the embedded certificate.
If the response does not contain an embedded certificate and issuer is not nil, then issuer will be used to verify the response signature.
Invalid responses and parse failures will result in a ParseError. Error responses will result in a ResponseError.
func ParseResponseForCert ¶
func ParseResponseForCert(bytes []byte, cert, issuer *x509.Certificate) (*Response, error)
ParseResponseForCert acts identically to ParseResponse, except it supports parsing responses that contain multiple statuses. If the response contains multiple statuses and cert is not nil, then ParseResponseForCert will return the first status which contains a matching serial, otherwise it will return an error. If cert is nil, then the first status in the response will be returned.
func (*Response) CheckSignatureFrom ¶
func (resp *Response) CheckSignatureFrom(issuer *x509.Certificate) error
CheckSignatureFrom checks that the signature in resp is a valid signature from issuer. This should only be used if resp.Certificate is nil. Otherwise, the OCSP response contained an intermediate certificate that created the signature. That signature is checked by ParseResponse and only resp.Certificate remains to be validated.
type ResponseError ¶
type ResponseError struct {
Status ResponseStatus
}
ResponseError is an error that may be returned by ParseResponse to indicate that the response itself is an error, not just that it's indicating that a certificate is revoked, unknown, etc.
func (ResponseError) Error ¶
func (r ResponseError) Error() string
type ResponseStatus ¶
type ResponseStatus int
ResponseStatus contains the result of an OCSP request. See https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6960#section-2.3
const ( Success ResponseStatus = 0 Malformed ResponseStatus = 1 InternalError ResponseStatus = 2 TryLater ResponseStatus = 3 // Status code four is unused in OCSP. See // https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6960#section-4.2.1 SignatureRequired ResponseStatus = 5 )
func (ResponseStatus) String ¶
func (r ResponseStatus) String() string