Documentation ¶
Overview ¶
package qtls partially implements TLS 1.2, as specified in RFC 5246, and TLS 1.3, as specified in RFC 8446.
Index ¶
- Constants
- func CipherSuiteName(id uint16) string
- func InitSessionTicketKeys(conf *Config)
- func Listen(network, laddr string, config *Config) (net.Listener, error)
- func NewListener(inner net.Listener, config *Config) net.Listener
- type AlertError
- type Certificate
- type CertificateRequestInfo
- type CertificateVerificationError
- type CipherSuite
- type ClientAuthType
- type ClientHelloInfo
- type ClientSessionCache
- type ClientSessionState
- type Config
- type Conn
- func (c *Conn) Close() error
- func (c *Conn) CloseWrite() error
- func (c *Conn) ConnectionState() ConnectionState
- func (c *Conn) Handshake() error
- func (c *Conn) HandshakeContext(ctx context.Context) error
- func (c *Conn) LocalAddr() net.Addr
- func (c *Conn) NetConn() net.Conn
- func (c *Conn) OCSPResponse() []byte
- func (c *Conn) Read(b []byte) (int, error)
- func (c *Conn) RemoteAddr() net.Addr
- func (c *Conn) SetDeadline(t time.Time) error
- func (c *Conn) SetReadDeadline(t time.Time) error
- func (c *Conn) SetWriteDeadline(t time.Time) error
- func (c *Conn) VerifyHostname(host string) error
- func (c *Conn) Write(b []byte) (int, error)
- type ConnectionState
- type CurveID
- type Dialer
- type ExtraConfig
- type QUICConfig
- type QUICConn
- func (q *QUICConn) Close() error
- func (q *QUICConn) ConnectionState() ConnectionState
- func (q *QUICConn) HandleData(level QUICEncryptionLevel, data []byte) error
- func (q *QUICConn) NextEvent() QUICEvent
- func (q *QUICConn) SendSessionTicket(earlyData bool) error
- func (q *QUICConn) SetTransportParameters(params []byte)
- func (q *QUICConn) Start(ctx context.Context) error
- type QUICEncryptionLevel
- type QUICEvent
- type QUICEventKind
- type RecordHeaderError
- type RenegotiationSupport
- type SignatureScheme
- Bugs
Examples ¶
Constants ¶
const ( // TLS 1.0 - 1.2 cipher suites. TLS_RSA_WITH_RC4_128_SHA uint16 = 0x0005 TLS_RSA_WITH_3DES_EDE_CBC_SHA uint16 = 0x000a TLS_RSA_WITH_AES_128_CBC_SHA uint16 = 0x002f TLS_RSA_WITH_AES_256_CBC_SHA uint16 = 0x0035 TLS_RSA_WITH_AES_128_CBC_SHA256 uint16 = 0x003c TLS_RSA_WITH_AES_128_GCM_SHA256 uint16 = 0x009c TLS_RSA_WITH_AES_256_GCM_SHA384 uint16 = 0x009d TLS_ECDHE_ECDSA_WITH_RC4_128_SHA uint16 = 0xc007 TLS_ECDHE_ECDSA_WITH_AES_128_CBC_SHA uint16 = 0xc009 TLS_ECDHE_ECDSA_WITH_AES_256_CBC_SHA uint16 = 0xc00a TLS_ECDHE_RSA_WITH_RC4_128_SHA uint16 = 0xc011 TLS_ECDHE_RSA_WITH_3DES_EDE_CBC_SHA uint16 = 0xc012 TLS_ECDHE_RSA_WITH_AES_128_CBC_SHA uint16 = 0xc013 TLS_ECDHE_RSA_WITH_AES_256_CBC_SHA uint16 = 0xc014 TLS_ECDHE_ECDSA_WITH_AES_128_CBC_SHA256 uint16 = 0xc023 TLS_ECDHE_RSA_WITH_AES_128_CBC_SHA256 uint16 = 0xc027 TLS_ECDHE_RSA_WITH_AES_128_GCM_SHA256 uint16 = 0xc02f TLS_ECDHE_ECDSA_WITH_AES_128_GCM_SHA256 uint16 = 0xc02b TLS_ECDHE_RSA_WITH_AES_256_GCM_SHA384 uint16 = 0xc030 TLS_ECDHE_ECDSA_WITH_AES_256_GCM_SHA384 uint16 = 0xc02c TLS_ECDHE_RSA_WITH_CHACHA20_POLY1305_SHA256 uint16 = 0xcca8 TLS_ECDHE_ECDSA_WITH_CHACHA20_POLY1305_SHA256 uint16 = 0xcca9 // TLS 1.3 cipher suites. TLS_AES_128_GCM_SHA256 uint16 = 0x1301 TLS_AES_256_GCM_SHA384 uint16 = 0x1302 TLS_CHACHA20_POLY1305_SHA256 uint16 = 0x1303 // TLS_FALLBACK_SCSV isn't a standard cipher suite but an indicator // that the client is doing version fallback. See RFC 7507. TLS_FALLBACK_SCSV uint16 = 0x5600 // Legacy names for the corresponding cipher suites with the correct _SHA256 // suffix, retained for backward compatibility. TLS_ECDHE_RSA_WITH_CHACHA20_POLY1305 = TLS_ECDHE_RSA_WITH_CHACHA20_POLY1305_SHA256 TLS_ECDHE_ECDSA_WITH_CHACHA20_POLY1305 = TLS_ECDHE_ECDSA_WITH_CHACHA20_POLY1305_SHA256 )
A list of cipher suite IDs that are, or have been, implemented by this package.
See https://www.iana.org/assignments/tls-parameters/tls-parameters.xml
const ( VersionTLS10 = 0x0301 VersionTLS11 = 0x0302 VersionTLS12 = 0x0303 VersionTLS13 = 0x0304 // Deprecated: SSLv3 is cryptographically broken, and is no longer // supported by this package. See golang.org/issue/32716. VersionSSL30 = 0x0300 )
const ( NoClientCert = tls.NoClientCert RequestClientCert = tls.RequestClientCert RequireAnyClientCert = tls.RequireAnyClientCert VerifyClientCertIfGiven = tls.VerifyClientCertIfGiven RequireAndVerifyClientCert = tls.RequireAndVerifyClientCert )
const ( // RenegotiateNever disables renegotiation. RenegotiateNever = tls.RenegotiateNever // RenegotiateOnceAsClient allows a remote server to request // renegotiation once per connection. RenegotiateOnceAsClient = tls.RenegotiateOnceAsClient // RenegotiateFreelyAsClient allows a remote server to repeatedly // request renegotiation. RenegotiateFreelyAsClient = tls.RenegotiateFreelyAsClient )
const ( QUICEncryptionLevelInitial = QUICEncryptionLevel(iota) QUICEncryptionLevelEarly QUICEncryptionLevelHandshake QUICEncryptionLevelApplication )
Variables ¶
This section is empty.
Functions ¶
func CipherSuiteName ¶
CipherSuiteName returns the standard name for the passed cipher suite ID (e.g. "TLS_ECDHE_ECDSA_WITH_AES_128_GCM_SHA256"), or a fallback representation of the ID value if the cipher suite is not implemented by this package.
func InitSessionTicketKeys ¶ added in v0.3.0
func InitSessionTicketKeys(conf *Config)
InitSessionTicketKeys triggers the initialization of session ticket keys.
func Listen ¶
Listen creates a TLS listener accepting connections on the given network address using net.Listen. The configuration config must be non-nil and must include at least one certificate or else set GetCertificate.
func NewListener ¶
NewListener creates a Listener which accepts connections from an inner Listener and wraps each connection with Server. The configuration config must be non-nil and must include at least one certificate or else set GetCertificate.
Types ¶
type AlertError ¶ added in v0.3.0
type AlertError uint8
An AlertError is a TLS alert.
When using a QUIC transport, QUICConn methods will return an error which wraps AlertError rather than sending a TLS alert.
func (AlertError) Error ¶ added in v0.3.0
func (e AlertError) Error() string
type Certificate ¶
type Certificate = tls.Certificate
A Certificate is a chain of one or more certificates, leaf first.
func LoadX509KeyPair ¶
func LoadX509KeyPair(certFile, keyFile string) (Certificate, error)
LoadX509KeyPair reads and parses a public/private key pair from a pair of files. The files must contain PEM encoded data. The certificate file may contain intermediate certificates following the leaf certificate to form a certificate chain. On successful return, Certificate.Leaf will be nil because the parsed form of the certificate is not retained.
Example ¶
package main import ( "crypto/tls" "log" ) func main() { cert, err := tls.LoadX509KeyPair("testdata/example-cert.pem", "testdata/example-key.pem") if err != nil { log.Fatal(err) } cfg := &tls.Config{Certificates: []tls.Certificate{cert}} listener, err := tls.Listen("tcp", ":2000", cfg) if err != nil { log.Fatal(err) } _ = listener }
Output:
func X509KeyPair ¶
func X509KeyPair(certPEMBlock, keyPEMBlock []byte) (Certificate, error)
X509KeyPair parses a public/private key pair from a pair of PEM encoded data. On successful return, Certificate.Leaf will be nil because the parsed form of the certificate is not retained.
Example ¶
package main import ( "crypto/tls" "log" ) func main() { certPem := []byte(`-----BEGIN CERTIFICATE----- MIIBhTCCASugAwIBAgIQIRi6zePL6mKjOipn+dNuaTAKBggqhkjOPQQDAjASMRAw DgYDVQQKEwdBY21lIENvMB4XDTE3MTAyMDE5NDMwNloXDTE4MTAyMDE5NDMwNlow EjEQMA4GA1UEChMHQWNtZSBDbzBZMBMGByqGSM49AgEGCCqGSM49AwEHA0IABD0d 7VNhbWvZLWPuj/RtHFjvtJBEwOkhbN/BnnE8rnZR8+sbwnc/KhCk3FhnpHZnQz7B 5aETbbIgmuvewdjvSBSjYzBhMA4GA1UdDwEB/wQEAwICpDATBgNVHSUEDDAKBggr BgEFBQcDATAPBgNVHRMBAf8EBTADAQH/MCkGA1UdEQQiMCCCDmxvY2FsaG9zdDo1 NDUzgg4xMjcuMC4wLjE6NTQ1MzAKBggqhkjOPQQDAgNIADBFAiEA2zpJEPQyz6/l Wf86aX6PepsntZv2GYlA5UpabfT2EZICICpJ5h/iI+i341gBmLiAFQOyTDT+/wQc 6MF9+Yw1Yy0t -----END CERTIFICATE-----`) keyPem := []byte(`-----BEGIN EC PRIVATE KEY----- MHcCAQEEIIrYSSNQFaA2Hwf1duRSxKtLYX5CB04fSeQ6tF1aY/PuoAoGCCqGSM49 AwEHoUQDQgAEPR3tU2Fta9ktY+6P9G0cWO+0kETA6SFs38GecTyudlHz6xvCdz8q EKTcWGekdmdDPsHloRNtsiCa697B2O9IFA== -----END EC PRIVATE KEY-----`) cert, err := tls.X509KeyPair(certPem, keyPem) if err != nil { log.Fatal(err) } cfg := &tls.Config{Certificates: []tls.Certificate{cert}} listener, err := tls.Listen("tcp", ":2000", cfg) if err != nil { log.Fatal(err) } _ = listener }
Output:
Example (HttpServer) ¶
package main import ( "crypto/tls" "log" "net/http" "time" ) func main() { certPem := []byte(`-----BEGIN CERTIFICATE----- MIIBhTCCASugAwIBAgIQIRi6zePL6mKjOipn+dNuaTAKBggqhkjOPQQDAjASMRAw DgYDVQQKEwdBY21lIENvMB4XDTE3MTAyMDE5NDMwNloXDTE4MTAyMDE5NDMwNlow EjEQMA4GA1UEChMHQWNtZSBDbzBZMBMGByqGSM49AgEGCCqGSM49AwEHA0IABD0d 7VNhbWvZLWPuj/RtHFjvtJBEwOkhbN/BnnE8rnZR8+sbwnc/KhCk3FhnpHZnQz7B 5aETbbIgmuvewdjvSBSjYzBhMA4GA1UdDwEB/wQEAwICpDATBgNVHSUEDDAKBggr BgEFBQcDATAPBgNVHRMBAf8EBTADAQH/MCkGA1UdEQQiMCCCDmxvY2FsaG9zdDo1 NDUzgg4xMjcuMC4wLjE6NTQ1MzAKBggqhkjOPQQDAgNIADBFAiEA2zpJEPQyz6/l Wf86aX6PepsntZv2GYlA5UpabfT2EZICICpJ5h/iI+i341gBmLiAFQOyTDT+/wQc 6MF9+Yw1Yy0t -----END CERTIFICATE-----`) keyPem := []byte(`-----BEGIN EC PRIVATE KEY----- MHcCAQEEIIrYSSNQFaA2Hwf1duRSxKtLYX5CB04fSeQ6tF1aY/PuoAoGCCqGSM49 AwEHoUQDQgAEPR3tU2Fta9ktY+6P9G0cWO+0kETA6SFs38GecTyudlHz6xvCdz8q EKTcWGekdmdDPsHloRNtsiCa697B2O9IFA== -----END EC PRIVATE KEY-----`) cert, err := tls.X509KeyPair(certPem, keyPem) if err != nil { log.Fatal(err) } cfg := &tls.Config{Certificates: []tls.Certificate{cert}} srv := &http.Server{ TLSConfig: cfg, ReadTimeout: time.Minute, WriteTimeout: time.Minute, } log.Fatal(srv.ListenAndServeTLS("", "")) }
Output:
type CertificateRequestInfo ¶
type CertificateRequestInfo = tls.CertificateRequestInfo
CertificateRequestInfo contains information from a server's CertificateRequest message, which is used to demand a certificate and proof of control from a client.
type CertificateVerificationError ¶
type CertificateVerificationError = tls.CertificateVerificationError
CertificateVerificationError is returned when certificate verification fails during the handshake.
type CipherSuite ¶
type CipherSuite struct { ID uint16 Name string // Supported versions is the list of TLS protocol versions that can // negotiate this cipher suite. SupportedVersions []uint16 // Insecure is true if the cipher suite has known security issues // due to its primitives, design, or implementation. Insecure bool }
CipherSuite is a TLS cipher suite. Note that most functions in this package accept and expose cipher suite IDs instead of this type.
func CipherSuites ¶
func CipherSuites() []*CipherSuite
CipherSuites returns a list of cipher suites currently implemented by this package, excluding those with security issues, which are returned by InsecureCipherSuites.
The list is sorted by ID. Note that the default cipher suites selected by this package might depend on logic that can't be captured by a static list, and might not match those returned by this function.
func InsecureCipherSuites ¶
func InsecureCipherSuites() []*CipherSuite
InsecureCipherSuites returns a list of cipher suites currently implemented by this package and which have security issues.
Most applications should not use the cipher suites in this list, and should only use those returned by CipherSuites.
type ClientHelloInfo ¶
type ClientHelloInfo = tls.ClientHelloInfo
ClientHelloInfo contains information from a ClientHello message in order to guide application logic in the GetCertificate and GetConfigForClient callbacks.
type ClientSessionCache ¶
type ClientSessionCache = tls.ClientSessionCache
ClientSessionCache is a cache of ClientSessionState objects that can be used by a client to resume a TLS session with a given server. ClientSessionCache implementations should expect to be called concurrently from different goroutines. Up to TLS 1.2, only ticket-based resumption is supported, not SessionID-based resumption. In TLS 1.3 they were merged into PSK modes, which are supported via this interface.
func NewLRUClientSessionCache ¶
func NewLRUClientSessionCache(capacity int) ClientSessionCache
NewLRUClientSessionCache returns a ClientSessionCache with the given capacity that uses an LRU strategy. If capacity is < 1, a default capacity is used instead.
type ClientSessionState ¶
type ClientSessionState = tls.ClientSessionState
ClientSessionState contains the state needed by clients to resume TLS sessions.
type Config ¶
A Config structure is used to configure a TLS client or server. After one has been passed to a TLS function it must not be modified. A Config may be reused; the tls package will also not modify it.
Example (KeyLogWriter) ¶
package main import ( "crypto/tls" "log" "net/http" "net/http/httptest" "os" ) // zeroSource is an io.Reader that returns an unlimited number of zero bytes. type zeroSource struct{} func (zeroSource) Read(b []byte) (n int, err error) { for i := range b { b[i] = 0 } return len(b), nil } func main() { // Debugging TLS applications by decrypting a network traffic capture. // WARNING: Use of KeyLogWriter compromises security and should only be // used for debugging. // Dummy test HTTP server for the example with insecure random so output is // reproducible. server := httptest.NewUnstartedServer(http.HandlerFunc(func(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {})) server.TLS = &tls.Config{ Rand: zeroSource{}, // for example only; don't do this. } server.StartTLS() defer server.Close() // Typically the log would go to an open file: // w, err := os.OpenFile("tls-secrets.txt", os.O_WRONLY|os.O_CREATE|os.O_TRUNC, 0600) w := os.Stdout client := &http.Client{ Transport: &http.Transport{ TLSClientConfig: &tls.Config{ KeyLogWriter: w, Rand: zeroSource{}, // for reproducible output; don't do this. InsecureSkipVerify: true, // test server certificate is not trusted. }, }, } resp, err := client.Get(server.URL) if err != nil { log.Fatalf("Failed to get URL: %v", err) } resp.Body.Close() // The resulting file can be used with Wireshark to decrypt the TLS // connection by setting (Pre)-Master-Secret log filename in SSL Protocol // preferences. }
Output:
Example (VerifyConnection) ¶
package main import ( "crypto/tls" "crypto/x509" ) func main() { // VerifyConnection can be used to replace and customize connection // verification. This example shows a VerifyConnection implementation that // will be approximately equivalent to what crypto/tls does normally to // verify the peer's certificate. // Client side configuration. _ = &tls.Config{ // Set InsecureSkipVerify to skip the default validation we are // replacing. This will not disable VerifyConnection. InsecureSkipVerify: true, VerifyConnection: func(cs tls.ConnectionState) error { opts := x509.VerifyOptions{ DNSName: cs.ServerName, Intermediates: x509.NewCertPool(), } for _, cert := range cs.PeerCertificates[1:] { opts.Intermediates.AddCert(cert) } _, err := cs.PeerCertificates[0].Verify(opts) return err }, } // Server side configuration. _ = &tls.Config{ // Require client certificates (or VerifyConnection will run anyway and // panic accessing cs.PeerCertificates[0]) but don't verify them with the // default verifier. This will not disable VerifyConnection. ClientAuth: tls.RequireAnyClientCert, VerifyConnection: func(cs tls.ConnectionState) error { opts := x509.VerifyOptions{ DNSName: cs.ServerName, Intermediates: x509.NewCertPool(), KeyUsages: []x509.ExtKeyUsage{x509.ExtKeyUsageClientAuth}, } for _, cert := range cs.PeerCertificates[1:] { opts.Intermediates.AddCert(cert) } _, err := cs.PeerCertificates[0].Verify(opts) return err }, } // Note that when certificates are not handled by the default verifier // ConnectionState.VerifiedChains will be nil. }
Output:
type Conn ¶
type Conn struct {
// contains filtered or unexported fields
}
A Conn represents a secured connection. It implements the net.Conn interface.
func Client ¶
Client returns a new TLS client side connection using conn as the underlying transport. The config cannot be nil: users must set either ServerName or InsecureSkipVerify in the config.
func Dial ¶
Dial connects to the given network address using net.Dial and then initiates a TLS handshake, returning the resulting TLS connection. Dial interprets a nil configuration as equivalent to the zero configuration; see the documentation of Config for the defaults.
Example ¶
package main import ( "crypto/tls" "crypto/x509" ) func main() { // Connecting with a custom root-certificate set. const rootPEM = ` -- GlobalSign Root R2, valid until Dec 15, 2021 -----BEGIN CERTIFICATE----- MIIDujCCAqKgAwIBAgILBAAAAAABD4Ym5g0wDQYJKoZIhvcNAQEFBQAwTDEgMB4G A1UECxMXR2xvYmFsU2lnbiBSb290IENBIC0gUjIxEzARBgNVBAoTCkdsb2JhbFNp Z24xEzARBgNVBAMTCkdsb2JhbFNpZ24wHhcNMDYxMjE1MDgwMDAwWhcNMjExMjE1 MDgwMDAwWjBMMSAwHgYDVQQLExdHbG9iYWxTaWduIFJvb3QgQ0EgLSBSMjETMBEG A1UEChMKR2xvYmFsU2lnbjETMBEGA1UEAxMKR2xvYmFsU2lnbjCCASIwDQYJKoZI hvcNAQEBBQADggEPADCCAQoCggEBAKbPJA6+Lm8omUVCxKs+IVSbC9N/hHD6ErPL v4dfxn+G07IwXNb9rfF73OX4YJYJkhD10FPe+3t+c4isUoh7SqbKSaZeqKeMWhG8 eoLrvozps6yWJQeXSpkqBy+0Hne/ig+1AnwblrjFuTosvNYSuetZfeLQBoZfXklq tTleiDTsvHgMCJiEbKjNS7SgfQx5TfC4LcshytVsW33hoCmEofnTlEnLJGKRILzd C9XZzPnqJworc5HGnRusyMvo4KD0L5CLTfuwNhv2GXqF4G3yYROIXJ/gkwpRl4pa zq+r1feqCapgvdzZX99yqWATXgAByUr6P6TqBwMhAo6CygPCm48CAwEAAaOBnDCB mTAOBgNVHQ8BAf8EBAMCAQYwDwYDVR0TAQH/BAUwAwEB/zAdBgNVHQ4EFgQUm+IH V2ccHsBqBt5ZtJot39wZhi4wNgYDVR0fBC8wLTAroCmgJ4YlaHR0cDovL2NybC5n bG9iYWxzaWduLm5ldC9yb290LXIyLmNybDAfBgNVHSMEGDAWgBSb4gdXZxwewGoG 3lm0mi3f3BmGLjANBgkqhkiG9w0BAQUFAAOCAQEAmYFThxxol4aR7OBKuEQLq4Gs J0/WwbgcQ3izDJr86iw8bmEbTUsp9Z8FHSbBuOmDAGJFtqkIk7mpM0sYmsL4h4hO 291xNBrBVNpGP+DTKqttVCL1OmLNIG+6KYnX3ZHu01yiPqFbQfXf5WRDLenVOavS ot+3i9DAgBkcRcAtjOj4LaR0VknFBbVPFd5uRHg5h6h+u/N5GJG79G+dwfCMNYxd AfvDbbnvRG15RjF+Cv6pgsH/76tuIMRQyV+dTZsXjAzlAcmgQWpzU/qlULRuJQ/7 TBj0/VLZjmmx6BEP3ojY+x1J96relc8geMJgEtslQIxq/H5COEBkEveegeGTLg== -----END CERTIFICATE-----` // First, create the set of root certificates. For this example we only // have one. It's also possible to omit this in order to use the // default root set of the current operating system. roots := x509.NewCertPool() ok := roots.AppendCertsFromPEM([]byte(rootPEM)) if !ok { panic("failed to parse root certificate") } conn, err := tls.Dial("tcp", "mail.google.com:443", &tls.Config{ RootCAs: roots, }) if err != nil { panic("failed to connect: " + err.Error()) } conn.Close() }
Output:
func DialWithDialer ¶
DialWithDialer connects to the given network address using dialer.Dial and then initiates a TLS handshake, returning the resulting TLS connection. Any timeout or deadline given in the dialer apply to connection and TLS handshake as a whole.
DialWithDialer interprets a nil configuration as equivalent to the zero configuration; see the documentation of Config for the defaults.
DialWithDialer uses context.Background internally; to specify the context, use Dialer.DialContext with NetDialer set to the desired dialer.
func Server ¶
Server returns a new TLS server side connection using conn as the underlying transport. The configuration config must be non-nil and must include at least one certificate or else set GetCertificate.
func (*Conn) CloseWrite ¶
CloseWrite shuts down the writing side of the connection. It should only be called once the handshake has completed and does not call CloseWrite on the underlying connection. Most callers should just use Close.
func (*Conn) ConnectionState ¶
func (c *Conn) ConnectionState() ConnectionState
ConnectionState returns basic TLS details about the connection.
func (*Conn) Handshake ¶
Handshake runs the client or server handshake protocol if it has not yet been run.
Most uses of this package need not call Handshake explicitly: the first Read or Write will call it automatically.
For control over canceling or setting a timeout on a handshake, use HandshakeContext or the Dialer's DialContext method instead.
func (*Conn) HandshakeContext ¶
HandshakeContext runs the client or server handshake protocol if it has not yet been run.
The provided Context must be non-nil. If the context is canceled before the handshake is complete, the handshake is interrupted and an error is returned. Once the handshake has completed, cancellation of the context will not affect the connection.
Most uses of this package need not call HandshakeContext explicitly: the first Read or Write will call it automatically.
func (*Conn) NetConn ¶
NetConn returns the underlying connection that is wrapped by c. Note that writing to or reading from this connection directly will corrupt the TLS session.
func (*Conn) OCSPResponse ¶
OCSPResponse returns the stapled OCSP response from the TLS server, if any. (Only valid for client connections.)
func (*Conn) Read ¶
Read reads data from the connection.
As Read calls Handshake, in order to prevent indefinite blocking a deadline must be set for both Read and Write before Read is called when the handshake has not yet completed. See SetDeadline, SetReadDeadline, and SetWriteDeadline.
func (*Conn) RemoteAddr ¶
RemoteAddr returns the remote network address.
func (*Conn) SetDeadline ¶
SetDeadline sets the read and write deadlines associated with the connection. A zero value for t means Read and Write will not time out. After a Write has timed out, the TLS state is corrupt and all future writes will return the same error.
func (*Conn) SetReadDeadline ¶
SetReadDeadline sets the read deadline on the underlying connection. A zero value for t means Read will not time out.
func (*Conn) SetWriteDeadline ¶
SetWriteDeadline sets the write deadline on the underlying connection. A zero value for t means Write will not time out. After a Write has timed out, the TLS state is corrupt and all future writes will return the same error.
func (*Conn) VerifyHostname ¶
VerifyHostname checks that the peer certificate chain is valid for connecting to host. If so, it returns nil; if not, it returns an error describing the problem.
type ConnectionState ¶
type ConnectionState = tls.ConnectionState
type Dialer ¶
type Dialer struct { // NetDialer is the optional dialer to use for the TLS connections' // underlying TCP connections. // A nil NetDialer is equivalent to the net.Dialer zero value. NetDialer *net.Dialer // Config is the TLS configuration to use for new connections. // A nil configuration is equivalent to the zero // configuration; see the documentation of Config for the // defaults. Config *Config }
Dialer dials TLS connections given a configuration and a Dialer for the underlying connection.
func (*Dialer) Dial ¶
Dial connects to the given network address and initiates a TLS handshake, returning the resulting TLS connection.
The returned Conn, if any, will always be of type *Conn.
Dial uses context.Background internally; to specify the context, use DialContext.
func (*Dialer) DialContext ¶
DialContext connects to the given network address and initiates a TLS handshake, returning the resulting TLS connection.
The provided Context must be non-nil. If the context expires before the connection is complete, an error is returned. Once successfully connected, any expiration of the context will not affect the connection.
The returned Conn, if any, will always be of type *Conn.
type ExtraConfig ¶
type ExtraConfig struct { // If Enable0RTT is enabled, the client will be allowed to send early data when resuming a session. // // It has no meaning on the client. Enable0RTT bool // GetAppDataForSessionTicket requests application data to be sent with a session ticket. // // It has no meaning on the client. GetAppDataForSessionTicket func() []byte // The Accept0RTT callback is called when the client offers 0-RTT. // The server then has to decide if it wants to accept or reject 0-RTT. // It is only used for servers. Accept0RTT func(appData []byte) bool // Is called when the client saves a session ticket to the session ticket. // This gives the application the opportunity to save some data along with the ticket, // which can be restored when the session ticket is used. GetAppDataForSessionState func() []byte // Is called when the client uses a session ticket. // Restores the application data that was saved earlier on GetAppDataForSessionTicket. SetAppDataFromSessionState func([]byte) (allowEarlyData bool) }
type QUICConfig ¶ added in v0.3.0
type QUICConfig struct { TLSConfig *Config ExtraConfig *ExtraConfig }
A QUICConfig configures a QUICConn.
type QUICConn ¶ added in v0.3.0
type QUICConn struct {
// contains filtered or unexported fields
}
A QUICConn represents a connection which uses a QUIC implementation as the underlying transport as described in RFC 9001.
Methods of QUICConn are not safe for concurrent use.
func QUICClient ¶ added in v0.3.0
func QUICClient(config *QUICConfig) *QUICConn
QUICClient returns a new TLS client side connection using QUICTransport as the underlying transport. The config cannot be nil.
The config's MinVersion must be at least TLS 1.3.
func QUICServer ¶ added in v0.3.0
func QUICServer(config *QUICConfig) *QUICConn
QUICServer returns a new TLS server side connection using QUICTransport as the underlying transport. The config cannot be nil.
The config's MinVersion must be at least TLS 1.3.
func (*QUICConn) Close ¶ added in v0.3.0
Close closes the connection and stops any in-progress handshake.
func (*QUICConn) ConnectionState ¶ added in v0.3.0
func (q *QUICConn) ConnectionState() ConnectionState
ConnectionState returns basic TLS details about the connection.
func (*QUICConn) HandleData ¶ added in v0.3.0
func (q *QUICConn) HandleData(level QUICEncryptionLevel, data []byte) error
HandleData handles handshake bytes received from the peer. It may produce connection events, which may be read with NextEvent.
func (*QUICConn) NextEvent ¶ added in v0.3.0
NextEvent returns the next event occurring on the connection. It returns an event with a Kind of QUICNoEvent when no events are available.
func (*QUICConn) SendSessionTicket ¶ added in v0.3.0
SendSessionTicket sends a session ticket to the client. It produces connection events, which may be read with NextEvent. Currently, it can only be called once.
func (*QUICConn) SetTransportParameters ¶ added in v0.3.0
SetTransportParameters sets the transport parameters to send to the peer.
Server connections may delay setting the transport parameters until after receiving the client's transport parameters. See QUICTransportParametersRequired.
type QUICEncryptionLevel ¶ added in v0.3.0
type QUICEncryptionLevel int
QUICEncryptionLevel represents a QUIC encryption level used to transmit handshake messages.
func (QUICEncryptionLevel) String ¶ added in v0.3.0
func (l QUICEncryptionLevel) String() string
type QUICEvent ¶ added in v0.3.0
type QUICEvent struct { Kind QUICEventKind // Set for QUICSetReadSecret, QUICSetWriteSecret, and QUICWriteData. Level QUICEncryptionLevel // Set for QUICTransportParameters, QUICSetReadSecret, QUICSetWriteSecret, and QUICWriteData. // The contents are owned by crypto/tls, and are valid until the next NextEvent call. Data []byte // Set for QUICSetReadSecret and QUICSetWriteSecret. Suite uint16 }
A QUICEvent is an event occurring on a QUIC connection.
The type of event is specified by the Kind field. The contents of the other fields are kind-specific.
type QUICEventKind ¶ added in v0.3.0
type QUICEventKind int
A QUICEventKind is a type of operation on a QUIC connection.
const ( // QUICNoEvent indicates that there are no events available. QUICNoEvent QUICEventKind = iota // QUICSetReadSecret and QUICSetWriteSecret provide the read and write // secrets for a given encryption level. // QUICEvent.Level, QUICEvent.Data, and QUICEvent.Suite are set. // // Secrets for the Initial encryption level are derived from the initial // destination connection ID, and are not provided by the QUICConn. QUICSetReadSecret QUICSetWriteSecret // QUICWriteData provides data to send to the peer in CRYPTO frames. // QUICEvent.Data is set. QUICWriteData // QUICTransportParameters provides the peer's QUIC transport parameters. // QUICEvent.Data is set. QUICTransportParameters // QUICTransportParametersRequired indicates that the caller must provide // QUIC transport parameters to send to the peer. The caller should set // the transport parameters with QUICConn.SetTransportParameters and call // QUICConn.NextEvent again. // // If transport parameters are set before calling QUICConn.Start, the // connection will never generate a QUICTransportParametersRequired event. QUICTransportParametersRequired // QUICRejectedEarlyData indicates that the server rejected 0-RTT data even // if we offered it. It's returned before QUICEncryptionLevelApplication // keys are returned. QUICRejectedEarlyData // QUICHandshakeDone indicates that the TLS handshake has completed. QUICHandshakeDone )
type RecordHeaderError ¶
type RecordHeaderError struct { // Msg contains a human readable string that describes the error. Msg string // RecordHeader contains the five bytes of TLS record header that // triggered the error. RecordHeader [5]byte // Conn provides the underlying net.Conn in the case that a client // sent an initial handshake that didn't look like TLS. // It is nil if there's already been a handshake or a TLS alert has // been written to the connection. Conn net.Conn }
RecordHeaderError is returned when a TLS record header is invalid.
func (RecordHeaderError) Error ¶
func (e RecordHeaderError) Error() string
type RenegotiationSupport ¶
type RenegotiationSupport = tls.RenegotiationSupport
RenegotiationSupport enumerates the different levels of support for TLS renegotiation. TLS renegotiation is the act of performing subsequent handshakes on a connection after the first. This significantly complicates the state machine and has been the source of numerous, subtle security issues. Initiating a renegotiation is not supported, but support for accepting renegotiation requests may be enabled.
Even when enabled, the server may not change its identity between handshakes (i.e. the leaf certificate must be the same). Additionally, concurrent handshake and application data flow is not permitted so renegotiation can only be used with protocols that synchronise with the renegotiation, such as HTTPS.
Renegotiation is not defined in TLS 1.3.
type SignatureScheme ¶
type SignatureScheme = tls.SignatureScheme
SignatureScheme is a tls.SignatureScheme
const ( // RSASSA-PKCS1-v1_5 algorithms. PKCS1WithSHA256 SignatureScheme = 0x0401 PKCS1WithSHA384 SignatureScheme = 0x0501 PKCS1WithSHA512 SignatureScheme = 0x0601 // RSASSA-PSS algorithms with public key OID rsaEncryption. PSSWithSHA256 SignatureScheme = 0x0804 PSSWithSHA384 SignatureScheme = 0x0805 PSSWithSHA512 SignatureScheme = 0x0806 // ECDSA algorithms. Only constrained to a specific curve in TLS 1.3. ECDSAWithP256AndSHA256 SignatureScheme = 0x0403 ECDSAWithP384AndSHA384 SignatureScheme = 0x0503 ECDSAWithP521AndSHA512 SignatureScheme = 0x0603 // EdDSA algorithms. Ed25519 SignatureScheme = 0x0807 // Legacy signature and hash algorithms for TLS 1.2. PKCS1WithSHA1 SignatureScheme = 0x0201 ECDSAWithSHA1 SignatureScheme = 0x0203 )
Notes ¶
Bugs ¶
The crypto/tls package only implements some countermeasures against Lucky13 attacks on CBC-mode encryption, and only on SHA1 variants. See http://www.isg.rhul.ac.uk/tls/TLStiming.pdf and https://www.imperialviolet.org/2013/02/04/luckythirteen.html.