5 This is a high-level summary of the most important changes.
6 For a full list of changes, see the git commit log; for example,
7 https://github.com/openssl/openssl/commits/ and pick the appropriate
10 Changes between 1.1.0h and 1.1.1 [xx XXX xxxx]
12 *) Deprecate ec2_mult.c and unify scalar multiplication code paths for
13 binary and prime elliptic curves.
16 *) Remove ECDSA nonce padding: EC_POINT_mul is now responsible for
17 constant time fixed point multiplication.
20 *) Updated CONTRIBUTING
23 *) Updated DRBG / RAND to request nonce and additional low entropy
24 randomness from the system.
27 *) Updated 'openssl rehash' to use OpenSSL consistent default.
30 *) Moved the load of the ssl_conf module to libcrypto, which helps
31 loading engines that libssl uses before libssl is initialised.
34 *) Added EVP_PKEY_sign() and EVP_PKEY_verify() for EdDSA
37 *) Fixed X509_NAME_ENTRY_set to get multi-valued RDNs right in all cases.
38 [Ingo Schwarze, Rich Salz]
40 *) Added output of accepting IP address and port for 'openssl s_server'
43 *) Added a new API for TLSv1.3 ciphersuites:
44 SSL_CTX_set_ciphersuites()
45 SSL_set_ciphersuites()
48 *) Memory allocation failures consistenly add an error to the error
52 *) Don't use OPENSSL_ENGINES and OPENSSL_CONF environment values
53 in libcrypto when run as setuid/setgid.
56 *) Load any config file by default when libssl is used.
59 *) Added new public header file <openssl/rand_drbg.h> and documentation
60 for the RAND_DRBG API. See manual page RAND_DRBG(7) for an overview.
63 *) QNX support removed (cannot find contributors to get their approval
64 for the license change).
67 *) TLSv1.3 replay protection for early data has been implemented. See the
68 SSL_read_early_data() man page for further details.
71 *) Separated TLSv1.3 ciphersuite configuration out from TLSv1.2 ciphersuite
72 configuration. TLSv1.3 ciphersuites are not compatible with TLSv1.2 and
73 below. Similarly TLSv1.2 ciphersuites are not compatible with TLSv1.3.
74 In order to avoid issues where legacy TLSv1.2 ciphersuite configuration
75 would otherwise inadvertently disable all TLSv1.3 ciphersuites the
76 configuration has been separated out. See the ciphers man page or the
77 SSL_CTX_set_ciphersuites() man page for more information.
80 *) On POSIX (BSD, Linux, ...) systems the ocsp(1) command running
81 in responder mode now supports the new "-multi" option, which
82 spawns the specified number of child processes to handle OCSP
83 requests. The "-timeout" option now also limits the OCSP
84 responder's patience to wait to receive the full client request
85 on a newly accepted connection. Child processes are respawned
86 as needed, and the CA index file is automatically reloaded
87 when changed. This makes it possible to run the "ocsp" responder
88 as a long-running service, making the OpenSSL CA somewhat more
89 feature-complete. In this mode, most diagnostic messages logged
90 after entering the event loop are logged via syslog(3) rather than
94 *) Added support for X448 and Ed448. Heavily based on original work by
98 *) Extend OSSL_STORE with capabilities to search and to narrow the set of
99 objects loaded. This adds the functions OSSL_STORE_expect() and
100 OSSL_STORE_find() as well as needed tools to construct searches and
101 get the search data out of them.
104 *) Support for TLSv1.3 added. Note that users upgrading from an earlier
105 version of OpenSSL should review their configuration settings to ensure
106 that they are still appropriate for TLSv1.3. For further information see:
107 https://www.openssl.org/blog/blog/2018/02/08/tlsv1.3/
109 NOTE: In this pre-release of OpenSSL a draft version of the
110 TLSv1.3 standard has been implemented. Implementations of different draft
111 versions of the standard do not inter-operate, and this version will not
112 inter-operate with an implementation of the final standard when it is
113 eventually published. Different pre-release versions may implement
114 different versions of the draft. The final version of OpenSSL 1.1.1 will
115 implement the final version of the standard.
116 TODO(TLS1.3): Remove the above note before final release
119 *) Grand redesign of the OpenSSL random generator
121 The default RAND method now utilizes an AES-CTR DRBG according to
122 NIST standard SP 800-90Ar1. The new random generator is essentially
123 a port of the default random generator from the OpenSSL FIPS 2.0
124 object module. It is a hybrid deterministic random bit generator
125 using an AES-CTR bit stream and which seeds and reseeds itself
126 automatically using trusted system entropy sources.
128 Some of its new features are:
129 o Support for multiple DRBG instances with seed chaining.
130 o Add a public DRBG instance for the default RAND method.
131 o Add a dedicated DRBG instance for generating long term private keys.
132 o Make the DRBG instances fork-safe.
133 o Keep all global DRBG instances on the secure heap if it is enabled.
134 o Add a DRBG instance to every SSL instance for lock free operation
135 and to increase unpredictability.
136 [Paul Dale, Benjamin Kaduk, Kurt Roeckx, Rich Salz, Matthias St. Pierre]
138 *) Changed Configure so it only says what it does and doesn't dump
139 so much data. Instead, ./configdata.pm should be used as a script
140 to display all sorts of configuration data.
143 *) Added processing of "make variables" to Configure.
146 *) Added SHA512/224 and SHA512/256 algorithm support.
149 *) The last traces of Netware support, first removed in 1.1.0, have
153 *) Get rid of Makefile.shared, and in the process, make the processing
154 of certain files (rc.obj, or the .def/.map/.opt files produced from
155 the ordinal files) more visible and hopefully easier to trace and
156 debug (or make silent).
159 *) Make it possible to have environment variable assignments as
160 arguments to config / Configure.
163 *) Add multi-prime RSA (RFC 8017) support.
166 *) Add SM3 implemented according to GB/T 32905-2016
167 [ Jack Lloyd <jack.lloyd@ribose.com>,
168 Ronald Tse <ronald.tse@ribose.com>,
169 Erick Borsboom <erick.borsboom@ribose.com> ]
171 *) Add 'Maximum Fragment Length' TLS extension negotiation and support
172 as documented in RFC6066.
173 Based on a patch from Tomasz Moń
174 [Filipe Raimundo da Silva]
176 *) Add SM4 implemented according to GB/T 32907-2016.
177 [ Jack Lloyd <jack.lloyd@ribose.com>,
178 Ronald Tse <ronald.tse@ribose.com>,
179 Erick Borsboom <erick.borsboom@ribose.com> ]
181 *) Reimplement -newreq-nodes and ERR_error_string_n; the
182 original author does not agree with the license change.
185 *) Add ARIA AEAD TLS support.
188 *) Some macro definitions to support VS6 have been removed. Visual
189 Studio 6 has not worked since 1.1.0
192 *) Add ERR_clear_last_mark(), to allow callers to clear the last mark
193 without clearing the errors.
196 *) Add "atfork" functions. If building on a system that without
197 pthreads, see doc/man3/OPENSSL_fork_prepare.pod for application
198 requirements. The RAND facility now uses/requires this.
204 *) The UI API becomes a permanent and integral part of libcrypto, i.e.
205 not possible to disable entirely. However, it's still possible to
206 disable the console reading UI method, UI_OpenSSL() (use UI_null()
209 To disable, configure with 'no-ui-console'. 'no-ui' is still
210 possible to use as an alias. Check at compile time with the
211 macro OPENSSL_NO_UI_CONSOLE. The macro OPENSSL_NO_UI is still
212 possible to check and is an alias for OPENSSL_NO_UI_CONSOLE.
215 *) Add a STORE module, which implements a uniform and URI based reader of
216 stores that can contain keys, certificates, CRLs and numerous other
217 objects. The main API is loosely based on a few stdio functions,
218 and includes OSSL_STORE_open, OSSL_STORE_load, OSSL_STORE_eof,
219 OSSL_STORE_error and OSSL_STORE_close.
220 The implementation uses backends called "loaders" to implement arbitrary
221 URI schemes. There is one built in "loader" for the 'file' scheme.
224 *) Add devcrypto engine. This has been implemented against cryptodev-linux,
225 then adjusted to work on FreeBSD 8.4 as well.
226 Enable by configuring with 'enable-devcryptoeng'. This is done by default
227 on BSD implementations, as cryptodev.h is assumed to exist on all of them.
230 *) Module names can prefixed with OSSL_ or OPENSSL_. This affects
231 util/mkerr.pl, which is adapted to allow those prefixes, leading to
232 error code calls like this:
234 OSSL_FOOerr(OSSL_FOO_F_SOMETHING, OSSL_FOO_R_WHATEVER);
236 With this change, we claim the namespaces OSSL and OPENSSL in a manner
237 that can be encoded in C. For the foreseeable future, this will only
239 [Richard Levitte and Tim Hudson]
241 *) Removed BSD cryptodev engine.
244 *) Add a build target 'build_all_generated', to build all generated files
245 and only that. This can be used to prepare everything that requires
246 things like perl for a system that lacks perl and then move everything
247 to that system and do the rest of the build there.
250 *) In the UI interface, make it possible to duplicate the user data. This
251 can be used by engines that need to retain the data for a longer time
252 than just the call where this user data is passed.
255 *) Ignore the '-named_curve auto' value for compatibility of applications
257 [Tomas Mraz <tmraz@fedoraproject.org>]
259 *) Fragmented SSL/TLS alerts are no longer accepted. An alert message is 2
260 bytes long. In theory it is permissible in SSLv3 - TLSv1.2 to fragment such
261 alerts across multiple records (some of which could be empty). In practice
262 it make no sense to send an empty alert record, or to fragment one. TLSv1.3
263 prohibts this altogether and other libraries (BoringSSL, NSS) do not
264 support this at all. Supporting it adds significant complexity to the
265 record layer, and its removal is unlikely to cause inter-operability
269 *) Add the ASN.1 types INT32, UINT32, INT64, UINT64 and variants prefixed
270 with Z. These are meant to replace LONG and ZLONG and to be size safe.
271 The use of LONG and ZLONG is discouraged and scheduled for deprecation
275 *) Add the 'z' and 'j' modifiers to BIO_printf() et al formatting string,
276 'z' is to be used for [s]size_t, and 'j' - with [u]int64_t.
277 [Richard Levitte, Andy Polyakov]
279 *) Add EC_KEY_get0_engine(), which does for EC_KEY what RSA_get0_engine()
283 *) Have 'config' recognise 64-bit mingw and choose 'mingw64' as the target
284 platform rather than 'mingw'.
287 *) The functions X509_STORE_add_cert and X509_STORE_add_crl return
288 success if they are asked to add an object which already exists
289 in the store. This change cascades to other functions which load
290 certificates and CRLs.
293 *) x86_64 assembly pack: annotate code with DWARF CFI directives to
294 facilitate stack unwinding even from assembly subroutines.
297 *) Remove VAX C specific definitions of OPENSSL_EXPORT, OPENSSL_EXTERN.
298 Also remove OPENSSL_GLOBAL entirely, as it became a no-op.
301 *) Remove the VMS-specific reimplementation of gmtime from crypto/o_times.c.
302 VMS C's RTL has a fully up to date gmtime() and gmtime_r() since V7.1,
303 which is the minimum version we support.
306 *) Certificate time validation (X509_cmp_time) enforces stricter
307 compliance with RFC 5280. Fractional seconds and timezone offsets
308 are no longer allowed.
311 *) Add support for ARIA
314 *) s_client will now send the Server Name Indication (SNI) extension by
315 default unless the new "-noservername" option is used. The server name is
316 based on the host provided to the "-connect" option unless overridden by
320 *) Add support for SipHash
323 *) OpenSSL now fails if it receives an unrecognised record type in TLS1.0
324 or TLS1.1. Previously this only happened in SSLv3 and TLS1.2. This is to
325 prevent issues where no progress is being made and the peer continually
326 sends unrecognised record types, using up resources processing them.
329 *) 'openssl passwd' can now produce SHA256 and SHA512 based output,
330 using the algorithm defined in
331 https://www.akkadia.org/drepper/SHA-crypt.txt
334 *) Heartbeat support has been removed; the ABI is changed for now.
335 [Richard Levitte, Rich Salz]
337 *) Support for SSL_OP_NO_ENCRYPT_THEN_MAC in SSL_CONF_cmd.
340 *) The RSA "null" method, which was partially supported to avoid patent
341 issues, has been replaced to always returns NULL.
345 Changes between 1.1.0h and 1.1.0i [xx XXX xxxx]
347 *) Fixed a text canonicalisation bug in CMS
349 Where a CMS detached signature is used with text content the text goes
350 through a canonicalisation process first prior to signing or verifying a
351 signature. This process strips trailing space at the end of lines, converts
352 line terminators to CRLF and removes additional trailing line terminators
353 at the end of a file. A bug in the canonicalisation process meant that
354 some characters, such as form-feed, were incorrectly treated as whitespace
355 and removed. This is contrary to the specification (RFC5485). This fix
356 could mean that detached text data signed with an earlier version of
357 OpenSSL 1.1.0 may fail to verify using the fixed version, or text data
358 signed with a fixed OpenSSL may fail to verify with an earlier version of
359 OpenSSL 1.1.0. A workaround is to only verify the canonicalised text data
360 and use the "-binary" flag (for the "cms" command line application) or set
361 the SMIME_BINARY/PKCS7_BINARY/CMS_BINARY flags (if using CMS_verify()).
364 Changes between 1.1.0g and 1.1.0h [27 Mar 2018]
366 *) Constructed ASN.1 types with a recursive definition could exceed the stack
368 Constructed ASN.1 types with a recursive definition (such as can be found
369 in PKCS7) could eventually exceed the stack given malicious input with
370 excessive recursion. This could result in a Denial Of Service attack. There
371 are no such structures used within SSL/TLS that come from untrusted sources
372 so this is considered safe.
374 This issue was reported to OpenSSL on 4th January 2018 by the OSS-fuzz
379 *) Incorrect CRYPTO_memcmp on HP-UX PA-RISC
381 Because of an implementation bug the PA-RISC CRYPTO_memcmp function is
382 effectively reduced to only comparing the least significant bit of each
383 byte. This allows an attacker to forge messages that would be considered as
384 authenticated in an amount of tries lower than that guaranteed by the
385 security claims of the scheme. The module can only be compiled by the
386 HP-UX assembler, so that only HP-UX PA-RISC targets are affected.
388 This issue was reported to OpenSSL on 2nd March 2018 by Peter Waltenberg
393 *) Add a build target 'build_all_generated', to build all generated files
394 and only that. This can be used to prepare everything that requires
395 things like perl for a system that lacks perl and then move everything
396 to that system and do the rest of the build there.
399 *) Backport SSL_OP_NO_RENGOTIATION
401 OpenSSL 1.0.2 and below had the ability to disable renegotiation using the
402 (undocumented) SSL3_FLAGS_NO_RENEGOTIATE_CIPHERS flag. Due to the opacity
403 changes this is no longer possible in 1.1.0. Therefore the new
404 SSL_OP_NO_RENEGOTIATION option from 1.1.1-dev has been backported to
405 1.1.0 to provide equivalent functionality.
407 Note that if an application built against 1.1.0h headers (or above) is run
408 using an older version of 1.1.0 (prior to 1.1.0h) then the option will be
409 accepted but nothing will happen, i.e. renegotiation will not be prevented.
412 *) Removed the OS390-Unix config target. It relied on a script that doesn't
416 *) rsaz_1024_mul_avx2 overflow bug on x86_64
418 There is an overflow bug in the AVX2 Montgomery multiplication procedure
419 used in exponentiation with 1024-bit moduli. No EC algorithms are affected.
420 Analysis suggests that attacks against RSA and DSA as a result of this
421 defect would be very difficult to perform and are not believed likely.
422 Attacks against DH1024 are considered just feasible, because most of the
423 work necessary to deduce information about a private key may be performed
424 offline. The amount of resources required for such an attack would be
425 significant. However, for an attack on TLS to be meaningful, the server
426 would have to share the DH1024 private key among multiple clients, which is
427 no longer an option since CVE-2016-0701.
429 This only affects processors that support the AVX2 but not ADX extensions
430 like Intel Haswell (4th generation).
432 This issue was reported to OpenSSL by David Benjamin (Google). The issue
433 was originally found via the OSS-Fuzz project.
437 Changes between 1.1.0f and 1.1.0g [2 Nov 2017]
439 *) bn_sqrx8x_internal carry bug on x86_64
441 There is a carry propagating bug in the x86_64 Montgomery squaring
442 procedure. No EC algorithms are affected. Analysis suggests that attacks
443 against RSA and DSA as a result of this defect would be very difficult to
444 perform and are not believed likely. Attacks against DH are considered just
445 feasible (although very difficult) because most of the work necessary to
446 deduce information about a private key may be performed offline. The amount
447 of resources required for such an attack would be very significant and
448 likely only accessible to a limited number of attackers. An attacker would
449 additionally need online access to an unpatched system using the target
450 private key in a scenario with persistent DH parameters and a private
451 key that is shared between multiple clients.
453 This only affects processors that support the BMI1, BMI2 and ADX extensions
454 like Intel Broadwell (5th generation) and later or AMD Ryzen.
456 This issue was reported to OpenSSL by the OSS-Fuzz project.
460 *) Malformed X.509 IPAddressFamily could cause OOB read
462 If an X.509 certificate has a malformed IPAddressFamily extension,
463 OpenSSL could do a one-byte buffer overread. The most likely result
464 would be an erroneous display of the certificate in text format.
466 This issue was reported to OpenSSL by the OSS-Fuzz project.
470 Changes between 1.1.0e and 1.1.0f [25 May 2017]
472 *) Have 'config' recognise 64-bit mingw and choose 'mingw64' as the target
473 platform rather than 'mingw'.
476 *) Remove the VMS-specific reimplementation of gmtime from crypto/o_times.c.
477 VMS C's RTL has a fully up to date gmtime() and gmtime_r() since V7.1,
478 which is the minimum version we support.
481 Changes between 1.1.0d and 1.1.0e [16 Feb 2017]
483 *) Encrypt-Then-Mac renegotiation crash
485 During a renegotiation handshake if the Encrypt-Then-Mac extension is
486 negotiated where it was not in the original handshake (or vice-versa) then
487 this can cause OpenSSL to crash (dependant on ciphersuite). Both clients
488 and servers are affected.
490 This issue was reported to OpenSSL by Joe Orton (Red Hat).
494 Changes between 1.1.0c and 1.1.0d [26 Jan 2017]
496 *) Truncated packet could crash via OOB read
498 If one side of an SSL/TLS path is running on a 32-bit host and a specific
499 cipher is being used, then a truncated packet can cause that host to
500 perform an out-of-bounds read, usually resulting in a crash.
502 This issue was reported to OpenSSL by Robert Święcki of Google.
506 *) Bad (EC)DHE parameters cause a client crash
508 If a malicious server supplies bad parameters for a DHE or ECDHE key
509 exchange then this can result in the client attempting to dereference a
510 NULL pointer leading to a client crash. This could be exploited in a Denial
513 This issue was reported to OpenSSL by Guido Vranken.
517 *) BN_mod_exp may produce incorrect results on x86_64
519 There is a carry propagating bug in the x86_64 Montgomery squaring
520 procedure. No EC algorithms are affected. Analysis suggests that attacks
521 against RSA and DSA as a result of this defect would be very difficult to
522 perform and are not believed likely. Attacks against DH are considered just
523 feasible (although very difficult) because most of the work necessary to
524 deduce information about a private key may be performed offline. The amount
525 of resources required for such an attack would be very significant and
526 likely only accessible to a limited number of attackers. An attacker would
527 additionally need online access to an unpatched system using the target
528 private key in a scenario with persistent DH parameters and a private
529 key that is shared between multiple clients. For example this can occur by
530 default in OpenSSL DHE based SSL/TLS ciphersuites. Note: This issue is very
531 similar to CVE-2015-3193 but must be treated as a separate problem.
533 This issue was reported to OpenSSL by the OSS-Fuzz project.
537 Changes between 1.1.0b and 1.1.0c [10 Nov 2016]
539 *) ChaCha20/Poly1305 heap-buffer-overflow
541 TLS connections using *-CHACHA20-POLY1305 ciphersuites are susceptible to
542 a DoS attack by corrupting larger payloads. This can result in an OpenSSL
543 crash. This issue is not considered to be exploitable beyond a DoS.
545 This issue was reported to OpenSSL by Robert Święcki (Google Security Team)
549 *) CMS Null dereference
551 Applications parsing invalid CMS structures can crash with a NULL pointer
552 dereference. This is caused by a bug in the handling of the ASN.1 CHOICE
553 type in OpenSSL 1.1.0 which can result in a NULL value being passed to the
554 structure callback if an attempt is made to free certain invalid encodings.
555 Only CHOICE structures using a callback which do not handle NULL value are
558 This issue was reported to OpenSSL by Tyler Nighswander of ForAllSecure.
562 *) Montgomery multiplication may produce incorrect results
564 There is a carry propagating bug in the Broadwell-specific Montgomery
565 multiplication procedure that handles input lengths divisible by, but
566 longer than 256 bits. Analysis suggests that attacks against RSA, DSA
567 and DH private keys are impossible. This is because the subroutine in
568 question is not used in operations with the private key itself and an input
569 of the attacker's direct choice. Otherwise the bug can manifest itself as
570 transient authentication and key negotiation failures or reproducible
571 erroneous outcome of public-key operations with specially crafted input.
572 Among EC algorithms only Brainpool P-512 curves are affected and one
573 presumably can attack ECDH key negotiation. Impact was not analyzed in
574 detail, because pre-requisites for attack are considered unlikely. Namely
575 multiple clients have to choose the curve in question and the server has to
576 share the private key among them, neither of which is default behaviour.
577 Even then only clients that chose the curve will be affected.
579 This issue was publicly reported as transient failures and was not
580 initially recognized as a security issue. Thanks to Richard Morgan for
581 providing reproducible case.
585 *) Removed automatic addition of RPATH in shared libraries and executables,
586 as this was a remainder from OpenSSL 1.0.x and isn't needed any more.
589 Changes between 1.1.0a and 1.1.0b [26 Sep 2016]
591 *) Fix Use After Free for large message sizes
593 The patch applied to address CVE-2016-6307 resulted in an issue where if a
594 message larger than approx 16k is received then the underlying buffer to
595 store the incoming message is reallocated and moved. Unfortunately a
596 dangling pointer to the old location is left which results in an attempt to
597 write to the previously freed location. This is likely to result in a
598 crash, however it could potentially lead to execution of arbitrary code.
600 This issue only affects OpenSSL 1.1.0a.
602 This issue was reported to OpenSSL by Robert Święcki.
606 Changes between 1.1.0 and 1.1.0a [22 Sep 2016]
608 *) OCSP Status Request extension unbounded memory growth
610 A malicious client can send an excessively large OCSP Status Request
611 extension. If that client continually requests renegotiation, sending a
612 large OCSP Status Request extension each time, then there will be unbounded
613 memory growth on the server. This will eventually lead to a Denial Of
614 Service attack through memory exhaustion. Servers with a default
615 configuration are vulnerable even if they do not support OCSP. Builds using
616 the "no-ocsp" build time option are not affected.
618 This issue was reported to OpenSSL by Shi Lei (Gear Team, Qihoo 360 Inc.)
622 *) SSL_peek() hang on empty record
624 OpenSSL 1.1.0 SSL/TLS will hang during a call to SSL_peek() if the peer
625 sends an empty record. This could be exploited by a malicious peer in a
626 Denial Of Service attack.
628 This issue was reported to OpenSSL by Alex Gaynor.
632 *) Excessive allocation of memory in tls_get_message_header() and
633 dtls1_preprocess_fragment()
635 A (D)TLS message includes 3 bytes for its length in the header for the
636 message. This would allow for messages up to 16Mb in length. Messages of
637 this length are excessive and OpenSSL includes a check to ensure that a
638 peer is sending reasonably sized messages in order to avoid too much memory
639 being consumed to service a connection. A flaw in the logic of version
640 1.1.0 means that memory for the message is allocated too early, prior to
641 the excessive message length check. Due to way memory is allocated in
642 OpenSSL this could mean an attacker could force up to 21Mb to be allocated
643 to service a connection. This could lead to a Denial of Service through
644 memory exhaustion. However, the excessive message length check still takes
645 place, and this would cause the connection to immediately fail. Assuming
646 that the application calls SSL_free() on the failed connection in a timely
647 manner then the 21Mb of allocated memory will then be immediately freed
648 again. Therefore the excessive memory allocation will be transitory in
649 nature. This then means that there is only a security impact if:
651 1) The application does not call SSL_free() in a timely manner in the event
652 that the connection fails
654 2) The application is working in a constrained environment where there is
655 very little free memory
657 3) The attacker initiates multiple connection attempts such that there are
658 multiple connections in a state where memory has been allocated for the
659 connection; SSL_free() has not yet been called; and there is insufficient
660 memory to service the multiple requests.
662 Except in the instance of (1) above any Denial Of Service is likely to be
663 transitory because as soon as the connection fails the memory is
664 subsequently freed again in the SSL_free() call. However there is an
665 increased risk during this period of application crashes due to the lack of
666 memory - which would then mean a more serious Denial of Service.
668 This issue was reported to OpenSSL by Shi Lei (Gear Team, Qihoo 360 Inc.)
669 (CVE-2016-6307 and CVE-2016-6308)
672 *) solaris-x86-cc, i.e. 32-bit configuration with vendor compiler,
673 had to be removed. Primary reason is that vendor assembler can't
674 assemble our modules with -KPIC flag. As result it, assembly
675 support, was not even available as option. But its lack means
676 lack of side-channel resistant code, which is incompatible with
677 security by todays standards. Fortunately gcc is readily available
678 prepackaged option, which we firmly point at...
681 Changes between 1.0.2h and 1.1.0 [25 Aug 2016]
683 *) Windows command-line tool supports UTF-8 opt-in option for arguments
684 and console input. Setting OPENSSL_WIN32_UTF8 environment variable
685 (to any value) allows Windows user to access PKCS#12 file generated
686 with Windows CryptoAPI and protected with non-ASCII password, as well
687 as files generated under UTF-8 locale on Linux also protected with
691 *) To mitigate the SWEET32 attack (CVE-2016-2183), 3DES cipher suites
692 have been disabled by default and removed from DEFAULT, just like RC4.
693 See the RC4 item below to re-enable both.
696 *) The method for finding the storage location for the Windows RAND seed file
697 has changed. First we check %RANDFILE%. If that is not set then we check
698 the directories %HOME%, %USERPROFILE% and %SYSTEMROOT% in that order. If
699 all else fails we fall back to C:\.
702 *) The EVP_EncryptUpdate() function has had its return type changed from void
703 to int. A return of 0 indicates and error while a return of 1 indicates
707 *) The flags RSA_FLAG_NO_CONSTTIME, DSA_FLAG_NO_EXP_CONSTTIME and
708 DH_FLAG_NO_EXP_CONSTTIME which previously provided the ability to switch
709 off the constant time implementation for RSA, DSA and DH have been made
710 no-ops and deprecated.
713 *) Windows RAND implementation was simplified to only get entropy by
714 calling CryptGenRandom(). Various other RAND-related tickets
716 [Joseph Wylie Yandle, Rich Salz]
718 *) The stack and lhash API's were renamed to start with OPENSSL_SK_
719 and OPENSSL_LH_, respectively. The old names are available
720 with API compatibility. They new names are now completely documented.
723 *) Unify TYPE_up_ref(obj) methods signature.
724 SSL_CTX_up_ref(), SSL_up_ref(), X509_up_ref(), EVP_PKEY_up_ref(),
725 X509_CRL_up_ref(), X509_OBJECT_up_ref_count() methods are now returning an
726 int (instead of void) like all others TYPE_up_ref() methods.
727 So now these methods also check the return value of CRYPTO_atomic_add(),
728 and the validity of object reference counter.
729 [fdasilvayy@gmail.com]
731 *) With Windows Visual Studio builds, the .pdb files are installed
732 alongside the installed libraries and executables. For a static
733 library installation, ossl_static.pdb is the associate compiler
734 generated .pdb file to be used when linking programs.
737 *) Remove openssl.spec. Packaging files belong with the packagers.
740 *) Automatic Darwin/OSX configuration has had a refresh, it will now
741 recognise x86_64 architectures automatically. You can still decide
742 to build for a different bitness with the environment variable
743 KERNEL_BITS (can be 32 or 64), for example:
745 KERNEL_BITS=32 ./config
749 *) Change default algorithms in pkcs8 utility to use PKCS#5 v2.0,
750 256 bit AES and HMAC with SHA256.
753 *) Remove support for MIPS o32 ABI on IRIX (and IRIX only).
756 *) Triple-DES ciphers have been moved from HIGH to MEDIUM.
759 *) To enable users to have their own config files and build file templates,
760 Configure looks in the directory indicated by the environment variable
761 OPENSSL_LOCAL_CONFIG_DIR as well as the in-source Configurations/
762 directory. On VMS, OPENSSL_LOCAL_CONFIG_DIR is expected to be a logical
763 name and is used as is.
766 *) The following datatypes were made opaque: X509_OBJECT, X509_STORE_CTX,
767 X509_STORE, X509_LOOKUP, and X509_LOOKUP_METHOD. The unused type
768 X509_CERT_FILE_CTX was removed.
771 *) "shared" builds are now the default. To create only static libraries use
772 the "no-shared" Configure option.
775 *) Remove the no-aes, no-hmac, no-rsa, no-sha and no-md5 Configure options.
776 All of these option have not worked for some while and are fundamental
780 *) Make various cleanup routines no-ops and mark them as deprecated. Most
781 global cleanup functions are no longer required because they are handled
782 via auto-deinit (see OPENSSL_init_crypto and OPENSSL_init_ssl man pages).
783 Explicitly de-initing can cause problems (e.g. where a library that uses
784 OpenSSL de-inits, but an application is still using it). The affected
785 functions are CONF_modules_free(), ENGINE_cleanup(), OBJ_cleanup(),
786 EVP_cleanup(), BIO_sock_cleanup(), CRYPTO_cleanup_all_ex_data(),
787 RAND_cleanup(), SSL_COMP_free_compression_methods(), ERR_free_strings() and
791 *) --strict-warnings no longer enables runtime debugging options
792 such as REF_DEBUG. Instead, debug options are automatically
793 enabled with '--debug' builds.
794 [Andy Polyakov, Emilia Käsper]
796 *) Made DH and DH_METHOD opaque. The structures for managing DH objects
797 have been moved out of the public header files. New functions for managing
798 these have been added.
801 *) Made RSA and RSA_METHOD opaque. The structures for managing RSA
802 objects have been moved out of the public header files. New
803 functions for managing these have been added.
806 *) Made DSA and DSA_METHOD opaque. The structures for managing DSA objects
807 have been moved out of the public header files. New functions for managing
808 these have been added.
811 *) Made BIO and BIO_METHOD opaque. The structures for managing BIOs have been
812 moved out of the public header files. New functions for managing these
816 *) Removed no-rijndael as a config option. Rijndael is an old name for AES.
819 *) Removed the mk1mf build scripts.
822 *) Headers are now wrapped, if necessary, with OPENSSL_NO_xxx, so
823 it is always safe to #include a header now.
826 *) Removed the aged BC-32 config and all its supporting scripts
829 *) Removed support for Ultrix, Netware, and OS/2.
832 *) Add support for HKDF.
835 *) Add support for blake2b and blake2s
838 *) Added support for "pipelining". Ciphers that have the
839 EVP_CIPH_FLAG_PIPELINE flag set have a capability to process multiple
840 encryptions/decryptions simultaneously. There are currently no built-in
841 ciphers with this property but the expectation is that engines will be able
842 to offer it to significantly improve throughput. Support has been extended
843 into libssl so that multiple records for a single connection can be
844 processed in one go (for >=TLS 1.1).
847 *) Added the AFALG engine. This is an async capable engine which is able to
848 offload work to the Linux kernel. In this initial version it only supports
849 AES128-CBC. The kernel must be version 4.1.0 or greater.
852 *) OpenSSL now uses a new threading API. It is no longer necessary to
853 set locking callbacks to use OpenSSL in a multi-threaded environment. There
854 are two supported threading models: pthreads and windows threads. It is
855 also possible to configure OpenSSL at compile time for "no-threads". The
856 old threading API should no longer be used. The functions have been
857 replaced with "no-op" compatibility macros.
858 [Alessandro Ghedini, Matt Caswell]
860 *) Modify behavior of ALPN to invoke callback after SNI/servername
861 callback, such that updates to the SSL_CTX affect ALPN.
864 *) Add SSL_CIPHER queries for authentication and key-exchange.
867 *) Changes to the DEFAULT cipherlist:
868 - Prefer (EC)DHE handshakes over plain RSA.
869 - Prefer AEAD ciphers over legacy ciphers.
870 - Prefer ECDSA over RSA when both certificates are available.
871 - Prefer TLSv1.2 ciphers/PRF.
872 - Remove DSS, SEED, IDEA, CAMELLIA, and AES-CCM from the
876 *) Change the ECC default curve list to be this, in order: x25519,
877 secp256r1, secp521r1, secp384r1.
880 *) RC4 based libssl ciphersuites are now classed as "weak" ciphers and are
881 disabled by default. They can be re-enabled using the
882 enable-weak-ssl-ciphers option to Configure.
885 *) If the server has ALPN configured, but supports no protocols that the
886 client advertises, send a fatal "no_application_protocol" alert.
887 This behaviour is SHALL in RFC 7301, though it isn't universally
888 implemented by other servers.
891 *) Add X25519 support.
892 Add ASN.1 and EVP_PKEY methods for X25519. This includes support
893 for public and private key encoding using the format documented in
894 draft-ietf-curdle-pkix-02. The corresponding EVP_PKEY method supports
895 key generation and key derivation.
897 TLS support complies with draft-ietf-tls-rfc4492bis-08 and uses
901 *) Deprecate SRP_VBASE_get_by_user.
902 SRP_VBASE_get_by_user had inconsistent memory management behaviour.
903 In order to fix an unavoidable memory leak (CVE-2016-0798),
904 SRP_VBASE_get_by_user was changed to ignore the "fake user" SRP
905 seed, even if the seed is configured.
907 Users should use SRP_VBASE_get1_by_user instead. Note that in
908 SRP_VBASE_get1_by_user, caller must free the returned value. Note
909 also that even though configuring the SRP seed attempts to hide
910 invalid usernames by continuing the handshake with fake
911 credentials, this behaviour is not constant time and no strong
912 guarantees are made that the handshake is indistinguishable from
913 that of a valid user.
916 *) Configuration change; it's now possible to build dynamic engines
917 without having to build shared libraries and vice versa. This
918 only applies to the engines in engines/, those in crypto/engine/
919 will always be built into libcrypto (i.e. "static").
921 Building dynamic engines is enabled by default; to disable, use
922 the configuration option "disable-dynamic-engine".
924 The only requirements for building dynamic engines are the
925 presence of the DSO module and building with position independent
926 code, so they will also automatically be disabled if configuring
927 with "disable-dso" or "disable-pic".
929 The macros OPENSSL_NO_STATIC_ENGINE and OPENSSL_NO_DYNAMIC_ENGINE
930 are also taken away from openssl/opensslconf.h, as they are
934 *) Configuration change; if there is a known flag to compile
935 position independent code, it will always be applied on the
936 libcrypto and libssl object files, and never on the application
937 object files. This means other libraries that use routines from
938 libcrypto / libssl can be made into shared libraries regardless
939 of how OpenSSL was configured.
941 If this isn't desirable, the configuration options "disable-pic"
942 or "no-pic" can be used to disable the use of PIC. This will
943 also disable building shared libraries and dynamic engines.
946 *) Removed JPAKE code. It was experimental and has no wide use.
949 *) The INSTALL_PREFIX Makefile variable has been renamed to
950 DESTDIR. That makes for less confusion on what this variable
951 is for. Also, the configuration option --install_prefix is
955 *) Heartbeat for TLS has been removed and is disabled by default
956 for DTLS; configure with enable-heartbeats. Code that uses the
957 old #define's might need to be updated.
958 [Emilia Käsper, Rich Salz]
960 *) Rename REF_CHECK to REF_DEBUG.
963 *) New "unified" build system
965 The "unified" build system is aimed to be a common system for all
966 platforms we support. With it comes new support for VMS.
968 This system builds supports building in a different directory tree
969 than the source tree. It produces one Makefile (for unix family
970 or lookalikes), or one descrip.mms (for VMS).
972 The source of information to make the Makefile / descrip.mms is
973 small files called 'build.info', holding the necessary
974 information for each directory with source to compile, and a
975 template in Configurations, like unix-Makefile.tmpl or
978 With this change, the library names were also renamed on Windows
979 and on VMS. They now have names that are closer to the standard
980 on Unix, and include the major version number, and in certain
981 cases, the architecture they are built for. See "Notes on shared
982 libraries" in INSTALL.
984 We rely heavily on the perl module Text::Template.
987 *) Added support for auto-initialisation and de-initialisation of the library.
988 OpenSSL no longer requires explicit init or deinit routines to be called,
989 except in certain circumstances. See the OPENSSL_init_crypto() and
990 OPENSSL_init_ssl() man pages for further information.
993 *) The arguments to the DTLSv1_listen function have changed. Specifically the
994 "peer" argument is now expected to be a BIO_ADDR object.
996 *) Rewrite of BIO networking library. The BIO library lacked consistent
997 support of IPv6, and adding it required some more extensive
998 modifications. This introduces the BIO_ADDR and BIO_ADDRINFO types,
999 which hold all types of addresses and chains of address information.
1000 It also introduces a new API, with functions like BIO_socket,
1001 BIO_connect, BIO_listen, BIO_lookup and a rewrite of BIO_accept.
1002 The source/sink BIOs BIO_s_connect, BIO_s_accept and BIO_s_datagram
1003 have been adapted accordingly.
1006 *) RSA_padding_check_PKCS1_type_1 now accepts inputs with and without
1010 *) CRIME protection: disable compression by default, even if OpenSSL is
1011 compiled with zlib enabled. Applications can still enable compression
1012 by calling SSL_CTX_clear_options(ctx, SSL_OP_NO_COMPRESSION), or by
1013 using the SSL_CONF library to configure compression.
1016 *) The signature of the session callback configured with
1017 SSL_CTX_sess_set_get_cb was changed. The read-only input buffer
1018 was explicitly marked as 'const unsigned char*' instead of
1022 *) Always DPURIFY. Remove the use of uninitialized memory in the
1023 RNG, and other conditional uses of DPURIFY. This makes -DPURIFY a no-op.
1026 *) Removed many obsolete configuration items, including
1027 DES_PTR, DES_RISC1, DES_RISC2, DES_INT
1028 MD2_CHAR, MD2_INT, MD2_LONG
1030 IDEA_SHORT, IDEA_LONG
1031 RC2_SHORT, RC2_LONG, RC4_LONG, RC4_CHUNK, RC4_INDEX
1032 [Rich Salz, with advice from Andy Polyakov]
1034 *) Many BN internals have been moved to an internal header file.
1035 [Rich Salz with help from Andy Polyakov]
1037 *) Configuration and writing out the results from it has changed.
1038 Files such as Makefile include/openssl/opensslconf.h and are now
1039 produced through general templates, such as Makefile.in and
1040 crypto/opensslconf.h.in and some help from the perl module
1043 Also, the center of configuration information is no longer
1044 Makefile. Instead, Configure produces a perl module in
1045 configdata.pm which holds most of the config data (in the hash
1046 table %config), the target data that comes from the target
1047 configuration in one of the Configurations/*.conf files (in
1051 *) To clarify their intended purposes, the Configure options
1052 --prefix and --openssldir change their semantics, and become more
1053 straightforward and less interdependent.
1055 --prefix shall be used exclusively to give the location INSTALLTOP
1056 where programs, scripts, libraries, include files and manuals are
1057 going to be installed. The default is now /usr/local.
1059 --openssldir shall be used exclusively to give the default
1060 location OPENSSLDIR where certificates, private keys, CRLs are
1061 managed. This is also where the default openssl.cnf gets
1063 If the directory given with this option is a relative path, the
1064 values of both the --prefix value and the --openssldir value will
1065 be combined to become OPENSSLDIR.
1066 The default for --openssldir is INSTALLTOP/ssl.
1068 Anyone who uses --openssldir to specify where OpenSSL is to be
1069 installed MUST change to use --prefix instead.
1072 *) The GOST engine was out of date and therefore it has been removed. An up
1073 to date GOST engine is now being maintained in an external repository.
1074 See: https://wiki.openssl.org/index.php/Binaries. Libssl still retains
1075 support for GOST ciphersuites (these are only activated if a GOST engine
1079 *) EGD is no longer supported by default; use enable-egd when
1081 [Ben Kaduk and Rich Salz]
1083 *) The distribution now has Makefile.in files, which are used to
1084 create Makefile's when Configure is run. *Configure must be run
1085 before trying to build now.*
1088 *) The return value for SSL_CIPHER_description() for error conditions
1092 *) Support for RFC6698/RFC7671 DANE TLSA peer authentication.
1094 Obtaining and performing DNSSEC validation of TLSA records is
1095 the application's responsibility. The application provides
1096 the TLSA records of its choice to OpenSSL, and these are then
1097 used to authenticate the peer.
1099 The TLSA records need not even come from DNS. They can, for
1100 example, be used to implement local end-entity certificate or
1101 trust-anchor "pinning", where the "pin" data takes the form
1102 of TLSA records, which can augment or replace verification
1103 based on the usual WebPKI public certification authorities.
1106 *) Revert default OPENSSL_NO_DEPRECATED setting. Instead OpenSSL
1107 continues to support deprecated interfaces in default builds.
1108 However, applications are strongly advised to compile their
1109 source files with -DOPENSSL_API_COMPAT=0x10100000L, which hides
1110 the declarations of all interfaces deprecated in 0.9.8, 1.0.0
1111 or the 1.1.0 releases.
1113 In environments in which all applications have been ported to
1114 not use any deprecated interfaces OpenSSL's Configure script
1115 should be used with the --api=1.1.0 option to entirely remove
1116 support for the deprecated features from the library and
1117 unconditionally disable them in the installed headers.
1118 Essentially the same effect can be achieved with the "no-deprecated"
1119 argument to Configure, except that this will always restrict
1120 the build to just the latest API, rather than a fixed API
1123 As applications are ported to future revisions of the API,
1124 they should update their compile-time OPENSSL_API_COMPAT define
1125 accordingly, but in most cases should be able to continue to
1126 compile with later releases.
1128 The OPENSSL_API_COMPAT versions for 1.0.0, and 0.9.8 are
1129 0x10000000L and 0x00908000L, respectively. However those
1130 versions did not support the OPENSSL_API_COMPAT feature, and
1131 so applications are not typically tested for explicit support
1132 of just the undeprecated features of either release.
1135 *) Add support for setting the minimum and maximum supported protocol.
1136 It can bet set via the SSL_set_min_proto_version() and
1137 SSL_set_max_proto_version(), or via the SSL_CONF's MinProtocol and
1138 MaxProtocol. It's recommended to use the new APIs to disable
1139 protocols instead of disabling individual protocols using
1140 SSL_set_options() or SSL_CONF's Protocol. This change also
1141 removes support for disabling TLS 1.2 in the OpenSSL TLS
1142 client at compile time by defining OPENSSL_NO_TLS1_2_CLIENT.
1145 *) Support for ChaCha20 and Poly1305 added to libcrypto and libssl.
1148 *) New EC_KEY_METHOD, this replaces the older ECDSA_METHOD and ECDH_METHOD
1149 and integrates ECDSA and ECDH functionality into EC. Implementations can
1150 now redirect key generation and no longer need to convert to or from
1153 Note: the ecdsa.h and ecdh.h headers are now no longer needed and just
1154 include the ec.h header file instead.
1157 *) Remove support for all 40 and 56 bit ciphers. This includes all the export
1158 ciphers who are no longer supported and drops support the ephemeral RSA key
1159 exchange. The LOW ciphers currently doesn't have any ciphers in it.
1162 *) Made EVP_MD_CTX, EVP_MD, EVP_CIPHER_CTX, EVP_CIPHER and HMAC_CTX
1163 opaque. For HMAC_CTX, the following constructors and destructors
1166 HMAC_CTX *HMAC_CTX_new(void);
1167 void HMAC_CTX_free(HMAC_CTX *ctx);
1169 For EVP_MD and EVP_CIPHER, complete APIs to create, fill and
1170 destroy such methods has been added. See EVP_MD_meth_new(3) and
1171 EVP_CIPHER_meth_new(3) for documentation.
1174 1) EVP_MD_CTX_cleanup(), EVP_CIPHER_CTX_cleanup() and
1175 HMAC_CTX_cleanup() were removed. HMAC_CTX_reset() and
1176 EVP_MD_CTX_reset() should be called instead to reinitialise
1177 an already created structure.
1178 2) For consistency with the majority of our object creators and
1179 destructors, EVP_MD_CTX_(create|destroy) were renamed to
1180 EVP_MD_CTX_(new|free). The old names are retained as macros
1181 for deprecated builds.
1184 *) Added ASYNC support. Libcrypto now includes the async sub-library to enable
1185 cryptographic operations to be performed asynchronously as long as an
1186 asynchronous capable engine is used. See the ASYNC_start_job() man page for
1187 further details. Libssl has also had this capability integrated with the
1188 introduction of the new mode SSL_MODE_ASYNC and associated error
1189 SSL_ERROR_WANT_ASYNC. See the SSL_CTX_set_mode() and SSL_get_error() man
1190 pages. This work was developed in partnership with Intel Corp.
1193 *) SSL_{CTX_}set_ecdh_auto() has been removed and ECDH is support is
1194 always enabled now. If you want to disable the support you should
1195 exclude it using the list of supported ciphers. This also means that the
1196 "-no_ecdhe" option has been removed from s_server.
1199 *) SSL_{CTX}_set_tmp_ecdh() which can set 1 EC curve now internally calls
1200 SSL_{CTX_}set1_curves() which can set a list.
1203 *) Remove support for SSL_{CTX_}set_tmp_ecdh_callback(). You should set the
1204 curve you want to support using SSL_{CTX_}set1_curves().
1207 *) State machine rewrite. The state machine code has been significantly
1208 refactored in order to remove much duplication of code and solve issues
1209 with the old code (see ssl/statem/README for further details). This change
1210 does have some associated API changes. Notably the SSL_state() function
1211 has been removed and replaced by SSL_get_state which now returns an
1212 "OSSL_HANDSHAKE_STATE" instead of an int. SSL_set_state() has been removed
1213 altogether. The previous handshake states defined in ssl.h and ssl3.h have
1217 *) All instances of the string "ssleay" in the public API were replaced
1218 with OpenSSL (case-matching; e.g., OPENSSL_VERSION for #define's)
1219 Some error codes related to internal RSA_eay API's were renamed.
1222 *) The demo files in crypto/threads were moved to demo/threads.
1225 *) Removed obsolete engines: 4758cca, aep, atalla, cswift, nuron, gmp,
1227 [Matt Caswell, Rich Salz]
1229 *) New ASN.1 embed macro.
1231 New ASN.1 macro ASN1_EMBED. This is the same as ASN1_SIMPLE except the
1232 structure is not allocated: it is part of the parent. That is instead of
1240 This reduces memory fragmentation and make it impossible to accidentally
1241 set a mandatory field to NULL.
1243 This currently only works for some fields specifically a SEQUENCE, CHOICE,
1244 or ASN1_STRING type which is part of a parent SEQUENCE. Since it is
1245 equivalent to ASN1_SIMPLE it cannot be tagged, OPTIONAL, SET OF or
1249 *) Remove EVP_CHECK_DES_KEY, a compile-time option that never compiled.
1252 *) Removed DES and RC4 ciphersuites from DEFAULT. Also removed RC2 although
1253 in 1.0.2 EXPORT was already removed and the only RC2 ciphersuite is also
1254 an EXPORT one. COMPLEMENTOFDEFAULT has been updated accordingly to add
1255 DES and RC4 ciphersuites.
1258 *) Rewrite EVP_DecodeUpdate (base64 decoding) to fix several bugs.
1259 This changes the decoding behaviour for some invalid messages,
1260 though the change is mostly in the more lenient direction, and
1261 legacy behaviour is preserved as much as possible.
1264 *) Fix no-stdio build.
1265 [ David Woodhouse <David.Woodhouse@intel.com> and also
1266 Ivan Nestlerode <ivan.nestlerode@sonos.com> ]
1268 *) New testing framework
1269 The testing framework has been largely rewritten and is now using
1270 perl and the perl modules Test::Harness and an extended variant of
1271 Test::More called OpenSSL::Test to do its work. All test scripts in
1272 test/ have been rewritten into test recipes, and all direct calls to
1273 executables in test/Makefile have become individual recipes using the
1274 simplified testing OpenSSL::Test::Simple.
1276 For documentation on our testing modules, do:
1278 perldoc test/testlib/OpenSSL/Test/Simple.pm
1279 perldoc test/testlib/OpenSSL/Test.pm
1283 *) Revamped memory debug; only -DCRYPTO_MDEBUG and -DCRYPTO_MDEBUG_ABORT
1284 are used; the latter aborts on memory leaks (usually checked on exit).
1285 Some undocumented "set malloc, etc., hooks" functions were removed
1286 and others were changed. All are now documented.
1289 *) In DSA_generate_parameters_ex, if the provided seed is too short,
1291 [Rich Salz and Ismo Puustinen <ismo.puustinen@intel.com>]
1293 *) Rewrite PSK to support ECDHE_PSK, DHE_PSK and RSA_PSK. Add ciphersuites
1294 from RFC4279, RFC4785, RFC5487, RFC5489.
1296 Thanks to Christian J. Dietrich and Giuseppe D'Angelo for the
1297 original RSA_PSK patch.
1300 *) Dropped support for the SSL3_FLAGS_DELAY_CLIENT_FINISHED flag. This SSLeay
1301 era flag was never set throughout the codebase (only read). Also removed
1302 SSL3_FLAGS_POP_BUFFER which was only used if
1303 SSL3_FLAGS_DELAY_CLIENT_FINISHED was also set.
1306 *) Changed the default name options in the "ca", "crl", "req" and "x509"
1307 to be "oneline" instead of "compat".
1310 *) Remove SSL_OP_TLS_BLOCK_PADDING_BUG. This is SSLeay legacy, we're
1311 not aware of clients that still exhibit this bug, and the workaround
1312 hasn't been working properly for a while.
1315 *) The return type of BIO_number_read() and BIO_number_written() as well as
1316 the corresponding num_read and num_write members in the BIO structure has
1317 changed from unsigned long to uint64_t. On platforms where an unsigned
1318 long is 32 bits (e.g. Windows) these counters could overflow if >4Gb is
1322 *) Given the pervasive nature of TLS extensions it is inadvisable to run
1323 OpenSSL without support for them. It also means that maintaining
1324 the OPENSSL_NO_TLSEXT option within the code is very invasive (and probably
1325 not well tested). Therefore the OPENSSL_NO_TLSEXT option has been removed.
1328 *) Removed support for the two export grade static DH ciphersuites
1329 EXP-DH-RSA-DES-CBC-SHA and EXP-DH-DSS-DES-CBC-SHA. These two ciphersuites
1330 were newly added (along with a number of other static DH ciphersuites) to
1331 1.0.2. However the two export ones have *never* worked since they were
1332 introduced. It seems strange in any case to be adding new export
1333 ciphersuites, and given "logjam" it also does not seem correct to fix them.
1336 *) Version negotiation has been rewritten. In particular SSLv23_method(),
1337 SSLv23_client_method() and SSLv23_server_method() have been deprecated,
1338 and turned into macros which simply call the new preferred function names
1339 TLS_method(), TLS_client_method() and TLS_server_method(). All new code
1340 should use the new names instead. Also as part of this change the ssl23.h
1341 header file has been removed.
1344 *) Support for Kerberos ciphersuites in TLS (RFC2712) has been removed. This
1345 code and the associated standard is no longer considered fit-for-purpose.
1348 *) RT2547 was closed. When generating a private key, try to make the
1349 output file readable only by the owner. This behavior change might
1350 be noticeable when interacting with other software.
1352 *) Documented all exdata functions. Added CRYPTO_free_ex_index.
1356 *) Added HTTP GET support to the ocsp command.
1359 *) Changed default digest for the dgst and enc commands from MD5 to
1363 *) RAND_pseudo_bytes has been deprecated. Users should use RAND_bytes instead.
1366 *) Added support for TLS extended master secret from
1367 draft-ietf-tls-session-hash-03.txt. Thanks for Alfredo Pironti for an
1368 initial patch which was a great help during development.
1371 *) All libssl internal structures have been removed from the public header
1372 files, and the OPENSSL_NO_SSL_INTERN option has been removed (since it is
1373 now redundant). Users should not attempt to access internal structures
1374 directly. Instead they should use the provided API functions.
1377 *) config has been changed so that by default OPENSSL_NO_DEPRECATED is used.
1378 Access to deprecated functions can be re-enabled by running config with
1379 "enable-deprecated". In addition applications wishing to use deprecated
1380 functions must define OPENSSL_USE_DEPRECATED. Note that this new behaviour
1381 will, by default, disable some transitive includes that previously existed
1382 in the header files (e.g. ec.h will no longer, by default, include bn.h)
1385 *) Added support for OCB mode. OpenSSL has been granted a patent license
1386 compatible with the OpenSSL license for use of OCB. Details are available
1387 at https://www.openssl.org/source/OCB-patent-grant-OpenSSL.pdf. Support
1388 for OCB can be removed by calling config with no-ocb.
1391 *) SSLv2 support has been removed. It still supports receiving a SSLv2
1392 compatible client hello.
1395 *) Increased the minimal RSA keysize from 256 to 512 bits [Rich Salz],
1396 done while fixing the error code for the key-too-small case.
1397 [Annie Yousar <a.yousar@informatik.hu-berlin.de>]
1399 *) CA.sh has been removed; use CA.pl instead.
1402 *) Removed old DES API.
1405 *) Remove various unsupported platforms:
1411 Sinix/ReliantUNIX RM400
1416 16-bit platforms such as WIN16
1419 *) Clean up OPENSSL_NO_xxx #define's
1420 Use setbuf() and remove OPENSSL_NO_SETVBUF_IONBF
1421 Rename OPENSSL_SYSNAME_xxx to OPENSSL_SYS_xxx
1422 OPENSSL_NO_EC{DH,DSA} merged into OPENSSL_NO_EC
1423 OPENSSL_NO_RIPEMD160, OPENSSL_NO_RIPEMD merged into OPENSSL_NO_RMD160
1424 OPENSSL_NO_FP_API merged into OPENSSL_NO_STDIO
1425 Remove OPENSSL_NO_BIO OPENSSL_NO_BUFFER OPENSSL_NO_CHAIN_VERIFY
1426 OPENSSL_NO_EVP OPENSSL_NO_FIPS_ERR OPENSSL_NO_HASH_COMP
1427 OPENSSL_NO_LHASH OPENSSL_NO_OBJECT OPENSSL_NO_SPEED OPENSSL_NO_STACK
1428 OPENSSL_NO_X509 OPENSSL_NO_X509_VERIFY
1429 Remove MS_STATIC; it's a relic from platforms <32 bits.
1432 *) Cleaned up dead code
1433 Remove all but one '#ifdef undef' which is to be looked at.
1436 *) Clean up calling of xxx_free routines.
1437 Just like free(), fix most of the xxx_free routines to accept
1438 NULL. Remove the non-null checks from callers. Save much code.
1441 *) Add secure heap for storage of private keys (when possible).
1442 Add BIO_s_secmem(), CBIGNUM, etc.
1443 Contributed by Akamai Technologies under our Corporate CLA.
1446 *) Experimental support for a new, fast, unbiased prime candidate generator,
1447 bn_probable_prime_dh_coprime(). Not currently used by any prime generator.
1448 [Felix Laurie von Massenbach <felix@erbridge.co.uk>]
1450 *) New output format NSS in the sess_id command line tool. This allows
1451 exporting the session id and the master key in NSS keylog format.
1452 [Martin Kaiser <martin@kaiser.cx>]
1454 *) Harmonize version and its documentation. -f flag is used to display
1456 [mancha <mancha1@zoho.com>]
1458 *) Fix eckey_priv_encode so it immediately returns an error upon a failure
1459 in i2d_ECPrivateKey. Thanks to Ted Unangst for feedback on this issue.
1460 [mancha <mancha1@zoho.com>]
1462 *) Fix some double frees. These are not thought to be exploitable.
1463 [mancha <mancha1@zoho.com>]
1465 *) A missing bounds check in the handling of the TLS heartbeat extension
1466 can be used to reveal up to 64k of memory to a connected client or
1469 Thanks for Neel Mehta of Google Security for discovering this bug and to
1470 Adam Langley <agl@chromium.org> and Bodo Moeller <bmoeller@acm.org> for
1471 preparing the fix (CVE-2014-0160)
1472 [Adam Langley, Bodo Moeller]
1474 *) Fix for the attack described in the paper "Recovering OpenSSL
1475 ECDSA Nonces Using the FLUSH+RELOAD Cache Side-channel Attack"
1476 by Yuval Yarom and Naomi Benger. Details can be obtained from:
1477 http://eprint.iacr.org/2014/140
1479 Thanks to Yuval Yarom and Naomi Benger for discovering this
1480 flaw and to Yuval Yarom for supplying a fix (CVE-2014-0076)
1481 [Yuval Yarom and Naomi Benger]
1483 *) Use algorithm specific chains in SSL_CTX_use_certificate_chain_file():
1484 this fixes a limitation in previous versions of OpenSSL.
1487 *) Experimental encrypt-then-mac support.
1489 Experimental support for encrypt then mac from
1490 draft-gutmann-tls-encrypt-then-mac-02.txt
1492 To enable it set the appropriate extension number (0x42 for the test
1493 server) using e.g. -DTLSEXT_TYPE_encrypt_then_mac=0x42
1495 For non-compliant peers (i.e. just about everything) this should have no
1498 WARNING: EXPERIMENTAL, SUBJECT TO CHANGE.
1502 *) Add EVP support for key wrapping algorithms, to avoid problems with
1503 existing code the flag EVP_CIPHER_CTX_WRAP_ALLOW has to be set in
1504 the EVP_CIPHER_CTX or an error is returned. Add AES and DES3 wrap
1505 algorithms and include tests cases.
1508 *) Extend CMS code to support RSA-PSS signatures and RSA-OAEP for
1512 *) Extended RSA OAEP support via EVP_PKEY API. Options to specify digest,
1513 MGF1 digest and OAEP label.
1516 *) Make openssl verify return errors.
1517 [Chris Palmer <palmer@google.com> and Ben Laurie]
1519 *) New function ASN1_TIME_diff to calculate the difference between two
1520 ASN1_TIME structures or one structure and the current time.
1523 *) Update fips_test_suite to support multiple command line options. New
1524 test to induce all self test errors in sequence and check expected
1528 *) Add FIPS_{rsa,dsa,ecdsa}_{sign,verify} functions which digest and
1529 sign or verify all in one operation.
1532 *) Add fips_algvs: a multicall fips utility incorporating all the algorithm
1533 test programs and fips_test_suite. Includes functionality to parse
1534 the minimal script output of fipsalgest.pl directly.
1537 *) Add authorisation parameter to FIPS_module_mode_set().
1540 *) Add FIPS selftest for ECDH algorithm using P-224 and B-233 curves.
1543 *) Use separate DRBG fields for internal and external flags. New function
1544 FIPS_drbg_health_check() to perform on demand health checking. Add
1545 generation tests to fips_test_suite with reduced health check interval to
1546 demonstrate periodic health checking. Add "nodh" option to
1547 fips_test_suite to skip very slow DH test.
1550 *) New function FIPS_get_cipherbynid() to lookup FIPS supported ciphers
1554 *) More extensive health check for DRBG checking many more failure modes.
1555 New function FIPS_selftest_drbg_all() to handle every possible DRBG
1556 combination: call this in fips_test_suite.
1559 *) Add support for canonical generation of DSA parameter 'g'. See
1562 *) Add support for HMAC DRBG from SP800-90. Update DRBG algorithm test and
1563 POST to handle HMAC cases.
1566 *) Add functions FIPS_module_version() and FIPS_module_version_text()
1567 to return numerical and string versions of the FIPS module number.
1570 *) Rename FIPS_mode_set and FIPS_mode to FIPS_module_mode_set and
1571 FIPS_module_mode. FIPS_mode and FIPS_mode_set will be implemented
1572 outside the validated module in the FIPS capable OpenSSL.
1575 *) Minor change to DRBG entropy callback semantics. In some cases
1576 there is no multiple of the block length between min_len and
1577 max_len. Allow the callback to return more than max_len bytes
1578 of entropy but discard any extra: it is the callback's responsibility
1579 to ensure that the extra data discarded does not impact the
1580 requested amount of entropy.
1583 *) Add PRNG security strength checks to RSA, DSA and ECDSA using
1584 information in FIPS186-3, SP800-57 and SP800-131A.
1587 *) CCM support via EVP. Interface is very similar to GCM case except we
1588 must supply all data in one chunk (i.e. no update, final) and the
1589 message length must be supplied if AAD is used. Add algorithm test
1593 *) Initial version of POST overhaul. Add POST callback to allow the status
1594 of POST to be monitored and/or failures induced. Modify fips_test_suite
1595 to use callback. Always run all selftests even if one fails.
1598 *) XTS support including algorithm test driver in the fips_gcmtest program.
1599 Note: this does increase the maximum key length from 32 to 64 bytes but
1600 there should be no binary compatibility issues as existing applications
1601 will never use XTS mode.
1604 *) Extensive reorganisation of FIPS PRNG behaviour. Remove all dependencies
1605 to OpenSSL RAND code and replace with a tiny FIPS RAND API which also
1606 performs algorithm blocking for unapproved PRNG types. Also do not
1607 set PRNG type in FIPS_mode_set(): leave this to the application.
1608 Add default OpenSSL DRBG handling: sets up FIPS PRNG and seeds with
1609 the standard OpenSSL PRNG: set additional data to a date time vector.
1612 *) Rename old X9.31 PRNG functions of the form FIPS_rand* to FIPS_x931*.
1613 This shouldn't present any incompatibility problems because applications
1614 shouldn't be using these directly and any that are will need to rethink
1615 anyway as the X9.31 PRNG is now deprecated by FIPS 140-2
1618 *) Extensive self tests and health checking required by SP800-90 DRBG.
1619 Remove strength parameter from FIPS_drbg_instantiate and always
1620 instantiate at maximum supported strength.
1623 *) Add ECDH code to fips module and fips_ecdhvs for primitives only testing.
1626 *) New algorithm test program fips_dhvs to handle DH primitives only testing.
1629 *) New function DH_compute_key_padded() to compute a DH key and pad with
1630 leading zeroes if needed: this complies with SP800-56A et al.
1633 *) Initial implementation of SP800-90 DRBGs for Hash and CTR. Not used by
1634 anything, incomplete, subject to change and largely untested at present.
1637 *) Modify fipscanisteronly build option to only build the necessary object
1638 files by filtering FIPS_EX_OBJ through a perl script in crypto/Makefile.
1641 *) Add experimental option FIPSSYMS to give all symbols in
1642 fipscanister.o and FIPS or fips prefix. This will avoid
1643 conflicts with future versions of OpenSSL. Add perl script
1644 util/fipsas.pl to preprocess assembly language source files
1645 and rename any affected symbols.
1648 *) Add selftest checks and algorithm block of non-fips algorithms in
1649 FIPS mode. Remove DES2 from selftests.
1652 *) Add ECDSA code to fips module. Add tiny fips_ecdsa_check to just
1653 return internal method without any ENGINE dependencies. Add new
1654 tiny fips sign and verify functions.
1657 *) New build option no-ec2m to disable characteristic 2 code.
1660 *) New build option "fipscanisteronly". This only builds fipscanister.o
1661 and (currently) associated fips utilities. Uses the file Makefile.fips
1662 instead of Makefile.org as the prototype.
1665 *) Add some FIPS mode restrictions to GCM. Add internal IV generator.
1666 Update fips_gcmtest to use IV generator.
1669 *) Initial, experimental EVP support for AES-GCM. AAD can be input by
1670 setting output buffer to NULL. The *Final function must be
1671 called although it will not retrieve any additional data. The tag
1672 can be set or retrieved with a ctrl. The IV length is by default 12
1673 bytes (96 bits) but can be set to an alternative value. If the IV
1674 length exceeds the maximum IV length (currently 16 bytes) it cannot be
1678 *) New flag in ciphers: EVP_CIPH_FLAG_CUSTOM_CIPHER. This means the
1679 underlying do_cipher function handles all cipher semantics itself
1680 including padding and finalisation. This is useful if (for example)
1681 an ENGINE cipher handles block padding itself. The behaviour of
1682 do_cipher is subtly changed if this flag is set: the return value
1683 is the number of characters written to the output buffer (zero is
1684 no longer an error code) or a negative error code. Also if the
1685 input buffer is NULL and length 0 finalisation should be performed.
1688 *) If a candidate issuer certificate is already part of the constructed
1689 path ignore it: new debug notification X509_V_ERR_PATH_LOOP for this case.
1692 *) Improve forward-security support: add functions
1694 void SSL_CTX_set_not_resumable_session_callback(SSL_CTX *ctx, int (*cb)(SSL *ssl, int is_forward_secure))
1695 void SSL_set_not_resumable_session_callback(SSL *ssl, int (*cb)(SSL *ssl, int is_forward_secure))
1697 for use by SSL/TLS servers; the callback function will be called whenever a
1698 new session is created, and gets to decide whether the session may be
1699 cached to make it resumable (return 0) or not (return 1). (As by the
1700 SSL/TLS protocol specifications, the session_id sent by the server will be
1701 empty to indicate that the session is not resumable; also, the server will
1702 not generate RFC 4507 (RFC 5077) session tickets.)
1704 A simple reasonable callback implementation is to return is_forward_secure.
1705 This parameter will be set to 1 or 0 depending on the ciphersuite selected
1706 by the SSL/TLS server library, indicating whether it can provide forward
1708 [Emilia Käsper <emilia.kasper@esat.kuleuven.be> (Google)]
1710 *) New -verify_name option in command line utilities to set verification
1714 *) Initial CMAC implementation. WARNING: EXPERIMENTAL, API MAY CHANGE.
1715 Add CMAC pkey methods.
1718 *) Experimental renegotiation in s_server -www mode. If the client
1719 browses /reneg connection is renegotiated. If /renegcert it is
1720 renegotiated requesting a certificate.
1723 *) Add an "external" session cache for debugging purposes to s_server. This
1724 should help trace issues which normally are only apparent in deployed
1725 multi-process servers.
1728 *) Extensive audit of libcrypto with DEBUG_UNUSED. Fix many cases where
1729 return value is ignored. NB. The functions RAND_add(), RAND_seed(),
1730 BIO_set_cipher() and some obscure PEM functions were changed so they
1731 can now return an error. The RAND changes required a change to the
1732 RAND_METHOD structure.
1735 *) New macro __owur for "OpenSSL Warn Unused Result". This makes use of
1736 a gcc attribute to warn if the result of a function is ignored. This
1737 is enable if DEBUG_UNUSED is set. Add to several functions in evp.h
1738 whose return value is often ignored.
1741 *) New -noct, -requestct, -requirect and -ctlogfile options for s_client.
1742 These allow SCTs (signed certificate timestamps) to be requested and
1743 validated when establishing a connection.
1744 [Rob Percival <robpercival@google.com>]
1746 Changes between 1.0.2g and 1.0.2h [3 May 2016]
1748 *) Prevent padding oracle in AES-NI CBC MAC check
1750 A MITM attacker can use a padding oracle attack to decrypt traffic
1751 when the connection uses an AES CBC cipher and the server support
1754 This issue was introduced as part of the fix for Lucky 13 padding
1755 attack (CVE-2013-0169). The padding check was rewritten to be in
1756 constant time by making sure that always the same bytes are read and
1757 compared against either the MAC or padding bytes. But it no longer
1758 checked that there was enough data to have both the MAC and padding
1761 This issue was reported by Juraj Somorovsky using TLS-Attacker.
1765 *) Fix EVP_EncodeUpdate overflow
1767 An overflow can occur in the EVP_EncodeUpdate() function which is used for
1768 Base64 encoding of binary data. If an attacker is able to supply very large
1769 amounts of input data then a length check can overflow resulting in a heap
1772 Internally to OpenSSL the EVP_EncodeUpdate() function is primarily used by
1773 the PEM_write_bio* family of functions. These are mainly used within the
1774 OpenSSL command line applications, so any application which processes data
1775 from an untrusted source and outputs it as a PEM file should be considered
1776 vulnerable to this issue. User applications that call these APIs directly
1777 with large amounts of untrusted data may also be vulnerable.
1779 This issue was reported by Guido Vranken.
1783 *) Fix EVP_EncryptUpdate overflow
1785 An overflow can occur in the EVP_EncryptUpdate() function. If an attacker
1786 is able to supply very large amounts of input data after a previous call to
1787 EVP_EncryptUpdate() with a partial block then a length check can overflow
1788 resulting in a heap corruption. Following an analysis of all OpenSSL
1789 internal usage of the EVP_EncryptUpdate() function all usage is one of two
1790 forms. The first form is where the EVP_EncryptUpdate() call is known to be
1791 the first called function after an EVP_EncryptInit(), and therefore that
1792 specific call must be safe. The second form is where the length passed to
1793 EVP_EncryptUpdate() can be seen from the code to be some small value and
1794 therefore there is no possibility of an overflow. Since all instances are
1795 one of these two forms, it is believed that there can be no overflows in
1796 internal code due to this problem. It should be noted that
1797 EVP_DecryptUpdate() can call EVP_EncryptUpdate() in certain code paths.
1798 Also EVP_CipherUpdate() is a synonym for EVP_EncryptUpdate(). All instances
1799 of these calls have also been analysed too and it is believed there are no
1800 instances in internal usage where an overflow could occur.
1802 This issue was reported by Guido Vranken.
1806 *) Prevent ASN.1 BIO excessive memory allocation
1808 When ASN.1 data is read from a BIO using functions such as d2i_CMS_bio()
1809 a short invalid encoding can cause allocation of large amounts of memory
1810 potentially consuming excessive resources or exhausting memory.
1812 Any application parsing untrusted data through d2i BIO functions is
1813 affected. The memory based functions such as d2i_X509() are *not* affected.
1814 Since the memory based functions are used by the TLS library, TLS
1815 applications are not affected.
1817 This issue was reported by Brian Carpenter.
1823 ASN1 Strings that are over 1024 bytes can cause an overread in applications
1824 using the X509_NAME_oneline() function on EBCDIC systems. This could result
1825 in arbitrary stack data being returned in the buffer.
1827 This issue was reported by Guido Vranken.
1831 *) Modify behavior of ALPN to invoke callback after SNI/servername
1832 callback, such that updates to the SSL_CTX affect ALPN.
1835 *) Remove LOW from the DEFAULT cipher list. This removes singles DES from the
1839 *) Only remove the SSLv2 methods with the no-ssl2-method option. When the
1840 methods are enabled and ssl2 is disabled the methods return NULL.
1843 Changes between 1.0.2f and 1.0.2g [1 Mar 2016]
1845 * Disable weak ciphers in SSLv3 and up in default builds of OpenSSL.
1846 Builds that are not configured with "enable-weak-ssl-ciphers" will not
1847 provide any "EXPORT" or "LOW" strength ciphers.
1850 * Disable SSLv2 default build, default negotiation and weak ciphers. SSLv2
1851 is by default disabled at build-time. Builds that are not configured with
1852 "enable-ssl2" will not support SSLv2. Even if "enable-ssl2" is used,
1853 users who want to negotiate SSLv2 via the version-flexible SSLv23_method()
1854 will need to explicitly call either of:
1856 SSL_CTX_clear_options(ctx, SSL_OP_NO_SSLv2);
1858 SSL_clear_options(ssl, SSL_OP_NO_SSLv2);
1860 as appropriate. Even if either of those is used, or the application
1861 explicitly uses the version-specific SSLv2_method() or its client and
1862 server variants, SSLv2 ciphers vulnerable to exhaustive search key
1863 recovery have been removed. Specifically, the SSLv2 40-bit EXPORT
1864 ciphers, and SSLv2 56-bit DES are no longer available.
1868 *) Fix a double-free in DSA code
1870 A double free bug was discovered when OpenSSL parses malformed DSA private
1871 keys and could lead to a DoS attack or memory corruption for applications
1872 that receive DSA private keys from untrusted sources. This scenario is
1875 This issue was reported to OpenSSL by Adam Langley(Google/BoringSSL) using
1880 *) Disable SRP fake user seed to address a server memory leak.
1882 Add a new method SRP_VBASE_get1_by_user that handles the seed properly.
1884 SRP_VBASE_get_by_user had inconsistent memory management behaviour.
1885 In order to fix an unavoidable memory leak, SRP_VBASE_get_by_user
1886 was changed to ignore the "fake user" SRP seed, even if the seed
1889 Users should use SRP_VBASE_get1_by_user instead. Note that in
1890 SRP_VBASE_get1_by_user, caller must free the returned value. Note
1891 also that even though configuring the SRP seed attempts to hide
1892 invalid usernames by continuing the handshake with fake
1893 credentials, this behaviour is not constant time and no strong
1894 guarantees are made that the handshake is indistinguishable from
1895 that of a valid user.
1899 *) Fix BN_hex2bn/BN_dec2bn NULL pointer deref/heap corruption
1901 In the BN_hex2bn function the number of hex digits is calculated using an
1902 int value |i|. Later |bn_expand| is called with a value of |i * 4|. For
1903 large values of |i| this can result in |bn_expand| not allocating any
1904 memory because |i * 4| is negative. This can leave the internal BIGNUM data
1905 field as NULL leading to a subsequent NULL ptr deref. For very large values
1906 of |i|, the calculation |i * 4| could be a positive value smaller than |i|.
1907 In this case memory is allocated to the internal BIGNUM data field, but it
1908 is insufficiently sized leading to heap corruption. A similar issue exists
1909 in BN_dec2bn. This could have security consequences if BN_hex2bn/BN_dec2bn
1910 is ever called by user applications with very large untrusted hex/dec data.
1911 This is anticipated to be a rare occurrence.
1913 All OpenSSL internal usage of these functions use data that is not expected
1914 to be untrusted, e.g. config file data or application command line
1915 arguments. If user developed applications generate config file data based
1916 on untrusted data then it is possible that this could also lead to security
1917 consequences. This is also anticipated to be rare.
1919 This issue was reported to OpenSSL by Guido Vranken.
1923 *) Fix memory issues in BIO_*printf functions
1925 The internal |fmtstr| function used in processing a "%s" format string in
1926 the BIO_*printf functions could overflow while calculating the length of a
1927 string and cause an OOB read when printing very long strings.
1929 Additionally the internal |doapr_outch| function can attempt to write to an
1930 OOB memory location (at an offset from the NULL pointer) in the event of a
1931 memory allocation failure. In 1.0.2 and below this could be caused where
1932 the size of a buffer to be allocated is greater than INT_MAX. E.g. this
1933 could be in processing a very long "%s" format string. Memory leaks can
1936 The first issue may mask the second issue dependent on compiler behaviour.
1937 These problems could enable attacks where large amounts of untrusted data
1938 is passed to the BIO_*printf functions. If applications use these functions
1939 in this way then they could be vulnerable. OpenSSL itself uses these
1940 functions when printing out human-readable dumps of ASN.1 data. Therefore
1941 applications that print this data could be vulnerable if the data is from
1942 untrusted sources. OpenSSL command line applications could also be
1943 vulnerable where they print out ASN.1 data, or if untrusted data is passed
1944 as command line arguments.
1946 Libssl is not considered directly vulnerable. Additionally certificates etc
1947 received via remote connections via libssl are also unlikely to be able to
1948 trigger these issues because of message size limits enforced within libssl.
1950 This issue was reported to OpenSSL Guido Vranken.
1954 *) Side channel attack on modular exponentiation
1956 A side-channel attack was found which makes use of cache-bank conflicts on
1957 the Intel Sandy-Bridge microarchitecture which could lead to the recovery
1958 of RSA keys. The ability to exploit this issue is limited as it relies on
1959 an attacker who has control of code in a thread running on the same
1960 hyper-threaded core as the victim thread which is performing decryptions.
1962 This issue was reported to OpenSSL by Yuval Yarom, The University of
1963 Adelaide and NICTA, Daniel Genkin, Technion and Tel Aviv University, and
1964 Nadia Heninger, University of Pennsylvania with more information at
1965 http://cachebleed.info.
1969 *) Change the req app to generate a 2048-bit RSA/DSA key by default,
1970 if no keysize is specified with default_bits. This fixes an
1971 omission in an earlier change that changed all RSA/DSA key generation
1972 apps to use 2048 bits by default.
1975 Changes between 1.0.2e and 1.0.2f [28 Jan 2016]
1976 *) DH small subgroups
1978 Historically OpenSSL only ever generated DH parameters based on "safe"
1979 primes. More recently (in version 1.0.2) support was provided for
1980 generating X9.42 style parameter files such as those required for RFC 5114
1981 support. The primes used in such files may not be "safe". Where an
1982 application is using DH configured with parameters based on primes that are
1983 not "safe" then an attacker could use this fact to find a peer's private
1984 DH exponent. This attack requires that the attacker complete multiple
1985 handshakes in which the peer uses the same private DH exponent. For example
1986 this could be used to discover a TLS server's private DH exponent if it's
1987 reusing the private DH exponent or it's using a static DH ciphersuite.
1989 OpenSSL provides the option SSL_OP_SINGLE_DH_USE for ephemeral DH (DHE) in
1990 TLS. It is not on by default. If the option is not set then the server
1991 reuses the same private DH exponent for the life of the server process and
1992 would be vulnerable to this attack. It is believed that many popular
1993 applications do set this option and would therefore not be at risk.
1995 The fix for this issue adds an additional check where a "q" parameter is
1996 available (as is the case in X9.42 based parameters). This detects the
1997 only known attack, and is the only possible defense for static DH
1998 ciphersuites. This could have some performance impact.
2000 Additionally the SSL_OP_SINGLE_DH_USE option has been switched on by
2001 default and cannot be disabled. This could have some performance impact.
2003 This issue was reported to OpenSSL by Antonio Sanso (Adobe).
2007 *) SSLv2 doesn't block disabled ciphers
2009 A malicious client can negotiate SSLv2 ciphers that have been disabled on
2010 the server and complete SSLv2 handshakes even if all SSLv2 ciphers have
2011 been disabled, provided that the SSLv2 protocol was not also disabled via
2014 This issue was reported to OpenSSL on 26th December 2015 by Nimrod Aviram
2015 and Sebastian Schinzel.
2019 Changes between 1.0.2d and 1.0.2e [3 Dec 2015]
2021 *) BN_mod_exp may produce incorrect results on x86_64
2023 There is a carry propagating bug in the x86_64 Montgomery squaring
2024 procedure. No EC algorithms are affected. Analysis suggests that attacks
2025 against RSA and DSA as a result of this defect would be very difficult to
2026 perform and are not believed likely. Attacks against DH are considered just
2027 feasible (although very difficult) because most of the work necessary to
2028 deduce information about a private key may be performed offline. The amount
2029 of resources required for such an attack would be very significant and
2030 likely only accessible to a limited number of attackers. An attacker would
2031 additionally need online access to an unpatched system using the target
2032 private key in a scenario with persistent DH parameters and a private
2033 key that is shared between multiple clients. For example this can occur by
2034 default in OpenSSL DHE based SSL/TLS ciphersuites.
2036 This issue was reported to OpenSSL by Hanno Böck.
2040 *) Certificate verify crash with missing PSS parameter
2042 The signature verification routines will crash with a NULL pointer
2043 dereference if presented with an ASN.1 signature using the RSA PSS
2044 algorithm and absent mask generation function parameter. Since these
2045 routines are used to verify certificate signature algorithms this can be
2046 used to crash any certificate verification operation and exploited in a
2047 DoS attack. Any application which performs certificate verification is
2048 vulnerable including OpenSSL clients and servers which enable client
2051 This issue was reported to OpenSSL by Loïc Jonas Etienne (Qnective AG).
2055 *) X509_ATTRIBUTE memory leak
2057 When presented with a malformed X509_ATTRIBUTE structure OpenSSL will leak
2058 memory. This structure is used by the PKCS#7 and CMS routines so any
2059 application which reads PKCS#7 or CMS data from untrusted sources is
2060 affected. SSL/TLS is not affected.
2062 This issue was reported to OpenSSL by Adam Langley (Google/BoringSSL) using
2067 *) Rewrite EVP_DecodeUpdate (base64 decoding) to fix several bugs.
2068 This changes the decoding behaviour for some invalid messages,
2069 though the change is mostly in the more lenient direction, and
2070 legacy behaviour is preserved as much as possible.
2073 *) In DSA_generate_parameters_ex, if the provided seed is too short,
2075 [Rich Salz and Ismo Puustinen <ismo.puustinen@intel.com>]
2077 Changes between 1.0.2c and 1.0.2d [9 Jul 2015]
2079 *) Alternate chains certificate forgery
2081 During certificate verification, OpenSSL will attempt to find an
2082 alternative certificate chain if the first attempt to build such a chain
2083 fails. An error in the implementation of this logic can mean that an
2084 attacker could cause certain checks on untrusted certificates to be
2085 bypassed, such as the CA flag, enabling them to use a valid leaf
2086 certificate to act as a CA and "issue" an invalid certificate.
2088 This issue was reported to OpenSSL by Adam Langley/David Benjamin
2092 Changes between 1.0.2b and 1.0.2c [12 Jun 2015]
2094 *) Fix HMAC ABI incompatibility. The previous version introduced an ABI
2095 incompatibility in the handling of HMAC. The previous ABI has now been
2099 Changes between 1.0.2a and 1.0.2b [11 Jun 2015]
2101 *) Malformed ECParameters causes infinite loop
2103 When processing an ECParameters structure OpenSSL enters an infinite loop
2104 if the curve specified is over a specially malformed binary polynomial
2107 This can be used to perform denial of service against any
2108 system which processes public keys, certificate requests or
2109 certificates. This includes TLS clients and TLS servers with
2110 client authentication enabled.
2112 This issue was reported to OpenSSL by Joseph Barr-Pixton.
2116 *) Exploitable out-of-bounds read in X509_cmp_time
2118 X509_cmp_time does not properly check the length of the ASN1_TIME
2119 string and can read a few bytes out of bounds. In addition,
2120 X509_cmp_time accepts an arbitrary number of fractional seconds in the
2123 An attacker can use this to craft malformed certificates and CRLs of
2124 various sizes and potentially cause a segmentation fault, resulting in
2125 a DoS on applications that verify certificates or CRLs. TLS clients
2126 that verify CRLs are affected. TLS clients and servers with client
2127 authentication enabled may be affected if they use custom verification
2130 This issue was reported to OpenSSL by Robert Swiecki (Google), and
2131 independently by Hanno Böck.
2135 *) PKCS7 crash with missing EnvelopedContent
2137 The PKCS#7 parsing code does not handle missing inner EncryptedContent
2138 correctly. An attacker can craft malformed ASN.1-encoded PKCS#7 blobs
2139 with missing content and trigger a NULL pointer dereference on parsing.
2141 Applications that decrypt PKCS#7 data or otherwise parse PKCS#7
2142 structures from untrusted sources are affected. OpenSSL clients and
2143 servers are not affected.
2145 This issue was reported to OpenSSL by Michal Zalewski (Google).
2149 *) CMS verify infinite loop with unknown hash function
2151 When verifying a signedData message the CMS code can enter an infinite loop
2152 if presented with an unknown hash function OID. This can be used to perform
2153 denial of service against any system which verifies signedData messages using
2155 This issue was reported to OpenSSL by Johannes Bauer.
2159 *) Race condition handling NewSessionTicket
2161 If a NewSessionTicket is received by a multi-threaded client when attempting to
2162 reuse a previous ticket then a race condition can occur potentially leading to
2163 a double free of the ticket data.
2167 *) Only support 256-bit or stronger elliptic curves with the
2168 'ecdh_auto' setting (server) or by default (client). Of supported
2169 curves, prefer P-256 (both).
2172 Changes between 1.0.2 and 1.0.2a [19 Mar 2015]
2174 *) ClientHello sigalgs DoS fix
2176 If a client connects to an OpenSSL 1.0.2 server and renegotiates with an
2177 invalid signature algorithms extension a NULL pointer dereference will
2178 occur. This can be exploited in a DoS attack against the server.
2180 This issue was was reported to OpenSSL by David Ramos of Stanford
2183 [Stephen Henson and Matt Caswell]
2185 *) Multiblock corrupted pointer fix
2187 OpenSSL 1.0.2 introduced the "multiblock" performance improvement. This
2188 feature only applies on 64 bit x86 architecture platforms that support AES
2189 NI instructions. A defect in the implementation of "multiblock" can cause
2190 OpenSSL's internal write buffer to become incorrectly set to NULL when
2191 using non-blocking IO. Typically, when the user application is using a
2192 socket BIO for writing, this will only result in a failed connection.
2193 However if some other BIO is used then it is likely that a segmentation
2194 fault will be triggered, thus enabling a potential DoS attack.
2196 This issue was reported to OpenSSL by Daniel Danner and Rainer Mueller.
2200 *) Segmentation fault in DTLSv1_listen fix
2202 The DTLSv1_listen function is intended to be stateless and processes the
2203 initial ClientHello from many peers. It is common for user code to loop
2204 over the call to DTLSv1_listen until a valid ClientHello is received with
2205 an associated cookie. A defect in the implementation of DTLSv1_listen means
2206 that state is preserved in the SSL object from one invocation to the next
2207 that can lead to a segmentation fault. Errors processing the initial
2208 ClientHello can trigger this scenario. An example of such an error could be
2209 that a DTLS1.0 only client is attempting to connect to a DTLS1.2 only
2212 This issue was reported to OpenSSL by Per Allansson.
2216 *) Segmentation fault in ASN1_TYPE_cmp fix
2218 The function ASN1_TYPE_cmp will crash with an invalid read if an attempt is
2219 made to compare ASN.1 boolean types. Since ASN1_TYPE_cmp is used to check
2220 certificate signature algorithm consistency this can be used to crash any
2221 certificate verification operation and exploited in a DoS attack. Any
2222 application which performs certificate verification is vulnerable including
2223 OpenSSL clients and servers which enable client authentication.
2227 *) Segmentation fault for invalid PSS parameters fix
2229 The signature verification routines will crash with a NULL pointer
2230 dereference if presented with an ASN.1 signature using the RSA PSS
2231 algorithm and invalid parameters. Since these routines are used to verify
2232 certificate signature algorithms this can be used to crash any
2233 certificate verification operation and exploited in a DoS attack. Any
2234 application which performs certificate verification is vulnerable including
2235 OpenSSL clients and servers which enable client authentication.
2237 This issue was was reported to OpenSSL by Brian Carpenter.
2241 *) ASN.1 structure reuse memory corruption fix
2243 Reusing a structure in ASN.1 parsing may allow an attacker to cause
2244 memory corruption via an invalid write. Such reuse is and has been
2245 strongly discouraged and is believed to be rare.
2247 Applications that parse structures containing CHOICE or ANY DEFINED BY
2248 components may be affected. Certificate parsing (d2i_X509 and related
2249 functions) are however not affected. OpenSSL clients and servers are
2254 *) PKCS7 NULL pointer dereferences fix
2256 The PKCS#7 parsing code does not handle missing outer ContentInfo
2257 correctly. An attacker can craft malformed ASN.1-encoded PKCS#7 blobs with
2258 missing content and trigger a NULL pointer dereference on parsing.
2260 Applications that verify PKCS#7 signatures, decrypt PKCS#7 data or
2261 otherwise parse PKCS#7 structures from untrusted sources are
2262 affected. OpenSSL clients and servers are not affected.
2264 This issue was reported to OpenSSL by Michal Zalewski (Google).
2268 *) DoS via reachable assert in SSLv2 servers fix
2270 A malicious client can trigger an OPENSSL_assert (i.e., an abort) in
2271 servers that both support SSLv2 and enable export cipher suites by sending
2272 a specially crafted SSLv2 CLIENT-MASTER-KEY message.
2274 This issue was discovered by Sean Burford (Google) and Emilia Käsper
2275 (OpenSSL development team).
2279 *) Empty CKE with client auth and DHE fix
2281 If client auth is used then a server can seg fault in the event of a DHE
2282 ciphersuite being selected and a zero length ClientKeyExchange message
2283 being sent by the client. This could be exploited in a DoS attack.
2287 *) Handshake with unseeded PRNG fix
2289 Under certain conditions an OpenSSL 1.0.2 client can complete a handshake
2290 with an unseeded PRNG. The conditions are:
2291 - The client is on a platform where the PRNG has not been seeded
2292 automatically, and the user has not seeded manually
2293 - A protocol specific client method version has been used (i.e. not
2294 SSL_client_methodv23)
2295 - A ciphersuite is used that does not require additional random data from
2296 the PRNG beyond the initial ClientHello client random (e.g. PSK-RC4-SHA).
2298 If the handshake succeeds then the client random that has been used will
2299 have been generated from a PRNG with insufficient entropy and therefore the
2300 output may be predictable.
2302 For example using the following command with an unseeded openssl will
2303 succeed on an unpatched platform:
2305 openssl s_client -psk 1a2b3c4d -tls1_2 -cipher PSK-RC4-SHA
2309 *) Use After Free following d2i_ECPrivatekey error fix
2311 A malformed EC private key file consumed via the d2i_ECPrivateKey function
2312 could cause a use after free condition. This, in turn, could cause a double
2313 free in several private key parsing functions (such as d2i_PrivateKey
2314 or EVP_PKCS82PKEY) and could lead to a DoS attack or memory corruption
2315 for applications that receive EC private keys from untrusted
2316 sources. This scenario is considered rare.
2318 This issue was discovered by the BoringSSL project and fixed in their
2323 *) X509_to_X509_REQ NULL pointer deref fix
2325 The function X509_to_X509_REQ will crash with a NULL pointer dereference if
2326 the certificate key is invalid. This function is rarely used in practice.
2328 This issue was discovered by Brian Carpenter.
2332 *) Removed the export ciphers from the DEFAULT ciphers
2335 Changes between 1.0.1l and 1.0.2 [22 Jan 2015]
2337 *) Facilitate "universal" ARM builds targeting range of ARM ISAs, e.g.
2338 ARMv5 through ARMv8, as opposite to "locking" it to single one.
2339 So far those who have to target multiple platforms would compromise
2340 and argue that binary targeting say ARMv5 would still execute on
2341 ARMv8. "Universal" build resolves this compromise by providing
2342 near-optimal performance even on newer platforms.
2345 *) Accelerated NIST P-256 elliptic curve implementation for x86_64
2346 (other platforms pending).
2347 [Shay Gueron & Vlad Krasnov (Intel Corp), Andy Polyakov]
2349 *) Add support for the SignedCertificateTimestampList certificate and
2350 OCSP response extensions from RFC6962.
2353 *) Fix ec_GFp_simple_points_make_affine (thus, EC_POINTs_mul etc.)
2354 for corner cases. (Certain input points at infinity could lead to
2355 bogus results, with non-infinity inputs mapped to infinity too.)
2358 *) Initial support for PowerISA 2.0.7, first implemented in POWER8.
2359 This covers AES, SHA256/512 and GHASH. "Initial" means that most
2360 common cases are optimized and there still is room for further
2361 improvements. Vector Permutation AES for Altivec is also added.
2364 *) Add support for little-endian ppc64 Linux target.
2365 [Marcelo Cerri (IBM)]
2367 *) Initial support for AMRv8 ISA crypto extensions. This covers AES,
2368 SHA1, SHA256 and GHASH. "Initial" means that most common cases
2369 are optimized and there still is room for further improvements.
2370 Both 32- and 64-bit modes are supported.
2371 [Andy Polyakov, Ard Biesheuvel (Linaro)]
2373 *) Improved ARMv7 NEON support.
2376 *) Support for SPARC Architecture 2011 crypto extensions, first
2377 implemented in SPARC T4. This covers AES, DES, Camellia, SHA1,
2378 SHA256/512, MD5, GHASH and modular exponentiation.
2379 [Andy Polyakov, David Miller]
2381 *) Accelerated modular exponentiation for Intel processors, a.k.a.
2383 [Shay Gueron & Vlad Krasnov (Intel Corp)]
2385 *) Support for new and upcoming Intel processors, including AVX2,
2386 BMI and SHA ISA extensions. This includes additional "stitched"
2387 implementations, AESNI-SHA256 and GCM, and multi-buffer support
2390 This work was sponsored by Intel Corp.
2393 *) Support for DTLS 1.2. This adds two sets of DTLS methods: DTLS_*_method()
2394 supports both DTLS 1.2 and 1.0 and should use whatever version the peer
2395 supports and DTLSv1_2_*_method() which supports DTLS 1.2 only.
2398 *) Use algorithm specific chains in SSL_CTX_use_certificate_chain_file():
2399 this fixes a limitation in previous versions of OpenSSL.
2402 *) Extended RSA OAEP support via EVP_PKEY API. Options to specify digest,
2403 MGF1 digest and OAEP label.
2406 *) Add EVP support for key wrapping algorithms, to avoid problems with
2407 existing code the flag EVP_CIPHER_CTX_WRAP_ALLOW has to be set in
2408 the EVP_CIPHER_CTX or an error is returned. Add AES and DES3 wrap
2409 algorithms and include tests cases.
2412 *) Add functions to allocate and set the fields of an ECDSA_METHOD
2414 [Douglas E. Engert, Steve Henson]
2416 *) New functions OPENSSL_gmtime_diff and ASN1_TIME_diff to find the
2417 difference in days and seconds between two tm or ASN1_TIME structures.
2420 *) Add -rev test option to s_server to just reverse order of characters
2421 received by client and send back to server. Also prints an abbreviated
2422 summary of the connection parameters.
2425 *) New option -brief for s_client and s_server to print out a brief summary
2426 of connection parameters.
2429 *) Add callbacks for arbitrary TLS extensions.
2430 [Trevor Perrin <trevp@trevp.net> and Ben Laurie]
2432 *) New option -crl_download in several openssl utilities to download CRLs
2433 from CRLDP extension in certificates.
2436 *) New options -CRL and -CRLform for s_client and s_server for CRLs.
2439 *) New function X509_CRL_diff to generate a delta CRL from the difference
2440 of two full CRLs. Add support to "crl" utility.
2443 *) New functions to set lookup_crls function and to retrieve
2444 X509_STORE from X509_STORE_CTX.
2447 *) Print out deprecated issuer and subject unique ID fields in
2451 *) Extend OCSP I/O functions so they can be used for simple general purpose
2452 HTTP as well as OCSP. New wrapper function which can be used to download
2453 CRLs using the OCSP API.
2456 *) Delegate command line handling in s_client/s_server to SSL_CONF APIs.
2459 *) SSL_CONF* functions. These provide a common framework for application
2460 configuration using configuration files or command lines.
2463 *) SSL/TLS tracing code. This parses out SSL/TLS records using the
2464 message callback and prints the results. Needs compile time option
2465 "enable-ssl-trace". New options to s_client and s_server to enable
2469 *) New ctrl and macro to retrieve supported points extensions.
2470 Print out extension in s_server and s_client.
2473 *) New functions to retrieve certificate signature and signature
2477 *) Add functions to retrieve and manipulate the raw cipherlist sent by a
2481 *) New Suite B modes for TLS code. These use and enforce the requirements
2482 of RFC6460: restrict ciphersuites, only permit Suite B algorithms and
2483 only use Suite B curves. The Suite B modes can be set by using the
2484 strings "SUITEB128", "SUITEB192" or "SUITEB128ONLY" for the cipherstring.
2487 *) New chain verification flags for Suite B levels of security. Check
2488 algorithms are acceptable when flags are set in X509_verify_cert.
2491 *) Make tls1_check_chain return a set of flags indicating checks passed
2492 by a certificate chain. Add additional tests to handle client
2493 certificates: checks for matching certificate type and issuer name
2497 *) If an attempt is made to use a signature algorithm not in the peer
2498 preference list abort the handshake. If client has no suitable
2499 signature algorithms in response to a certificate request do not
2500 use the certificate.
2503 *) If server EC tmp key is not in client preference list abort handshake.
2506 *) Add support for certificate stores in CERT structure. This makes it
2507 possible to have different stores per SSL structure or one store in
2508 the parent SSL_CTX. Include distinct stores for certificate chain
2509 verification and chain building. New ctrl SSL_CTRL_BUILD_CERT_CHAIN
2510 to build and store a certificate chain in CERT structure: returning
2511 an error if the chain cannot be built: this will allow applications
2512 to test if a chain is correctly configured.
2514 Note: if the CERT based stores are not set then the parent SSL_CTX
2515 store is used to retain compatibility with existing behaviour.
2519 *) New function ssl_set_client_disabled to set a ciphersuite disabled
2520 mask based on the current session, check mask when sending client
2521 hello and checking the requested ciphersuite.
2524 *) New ctrls to retrieve and set certificate types in a certificate
2525 request message. Print out received values in s_client. If certificate
2526 types is not set with custom values set sensible values based on
2527 supported signature algorithms.
2530 *) Support for distinct client and server supported signature algorithms.
2533 *) Add certificate callback. If set this is called whenever a certificate
2534 is required by client or server. An application can decide which
2535 certificate chain to present based on arbitrary criteria: for example
2536 supported signature algorithms. Add very simple example to s_server.
2537 This fixes many of the problems and restrictions of the existing client
2538 certificate callback: for example you can now clear an existing
2539 certificate and specify the whole chain.
2542 *) Add new "valid_flags" field to CERT_PKEY structure which determines what
2543 the certificate can be used for (if anything). Set valid_flags field
2544 in new tls1_check_chain function. Simplify ssl_set_cert_masks which used
2545 to have similar checks in it.
2547 Add new "cert_flags" field to CERT structure and include a "strict mode".
2548 This enforces some TLS certificate requirements (such as only permitting
2549 certificate signature algorithms contained in the supported algorithms
2550 extension) which some implementations ignore: this option should be used
2551 with caution as it could cause interoperability issues.
2554 *) Update and tidy signature algorithm extension processing. Work out
2555 shared signature algorithms based on preferences and peer algorithms
2556 and print them out in s_client and s_server. Abort handshake if no
2557 shared signature algorithms.
2560 *) Add new functions to allow customised supported signature algorithms
2561 for SSL and SSL_CTX structures. Add options to s_client and s_server
2565 *) New function SSL_certs_clear() to delete all references to certificates
2566 from an SSL structure. Before this once a certificate had been added
2567 it couldn't be removed.
2570 *) Integrate hostname, email address and IP address checking with certificate
2571 verification. New verify options supporting checking in openssl utility.
2574 *) Fixes and wildcard matching support to hostname and email checking
2575 functions. Add manual page.
2576 [Florian Weimer (Red Hat Product Security Team)]
2578 *) New functions to check a hostname email or IP address against a
2579 certificate. Add options x509 utility to print results of checks against
2583 *) Fix OCSP checking.
2584 [Rob Stradling <rob.stradling@comodo.com> and Ben Laurie]
2586 *) Initial experimental support for explicitly trusted non-root CAs.
2587 OpenSSL still tries to build a complete chain to a root but if an
2588 intermediate CA has a trust setting included that is used. The first
2589 setting is used: whether to trust (e.g., -addtrust option to the x509
2593 *) Add -trusted_first option which attempts to find certificates in the
2594 trusted store even if an untrusted chain is also supplied.
2597 *) MIPS assembly pack updates: support for MIPS32r2 and SmartMIPS ASE,
2598 platform support for Linux and Android.
2601 *) Support for linux-x32, ILP32 environment in x86_64 framework.
2604 *) Experimental multi-implementation support for FIPS capable OpenSSL.
2605 When in FIPS mode the approved implementations are used as normal,
2606 when not in FIPS mode the internal unapproved versions are used instead.
2607 This means that the FIPS capable OpenSSL isn't forced to use the
2608 (often lower performance) FIPS implementations outside FIPS mode.
2611 *) Transparently support X9.42 DH parameters when calling
2612 PEM_read_bio_DHparameters. This means existing applications can handle
2613 the new parameter format automatically.
2616 *) Initial experimental support for X9.42 DH parameter format: mainly
2617 to support use of 'q' parameter for RFC5114 parameters.
2620 *) Add DH parameters from RFC5114 including test data to dhtest.
2623 *) Support for automatic EC temporary key parameter selection. If enabled
2624 the most preferred EC parameters are automatically used instead of
2625 hardcoded fixed parameters. Now a server just has to call:
2626 SSL_CTX_set_ecdh_auto(ctx, 1) and the server will automatically
2627 support ECDH and use the most appropriate parameters.
2630 *) Enhance and tidy EC curve and point format TLS extension code. Use
2631 static structures instead of allocation if default values are used.
2632 New ctrls to set curves we wish to support and to retrieve shared curves.
2633 Print out shared curves in s_server. New options to s_server and s_client
2634 to set list of supported curves.
2637 *) New ctrls to retrieve supported signature algorithms and
2638 supported curve values as an array of NIDs. Extend openssl utility
2639 to print out received values.
2642 *) Add new APIs EC_curve_nist2nid and EC_curve_nid2nist which convert
2643 between NIDs and the more common NIST names such as "P-256". Enhance
2644 ecparam utility and ECC method to recognise the NIST names for curves.
2647 *) Enhance SSL/TLS certificate chain handling to support different
2648 chains for each certificate instead of one chain in the parent SSL_CTX.
2651 *) Support for fixed DH ciphersuite client authentication: where both
2652 server and client use DH certificates with common parameters.
2655 *) Support for fixed DH ciphersuites: those requiring DH server
2659 *) New function i2d_re_X509_tbs for re-encoding the TBS portion of
2661 Note: Related 1.0.2-beta specific macros X509_get_cert_info,
2662 X509_CINF_set_modified, X509_CINF_get_issuer, X509_CINF_get_extensions and
2663 X509_CINF_get_signature were reverted post internal team review.
2665 Changes between 1.0.1k and 1.0.1l [15 Jan 2015]
2667 *) Build fixes for the Windows and OpenVMS platforms
2668 [Matt Caswell and Richard Levitte]
2670 Changes between 1.0.1j and 1.0.1k [8 Jan 2015]
2672 *) Fix DTLS segmentation fault in dtls1_get_record. A carefully crafted DTLS
2673 message can cause a segmentation fault in OpenSSL due to a NULL pointer
2674 dereference. This could lead to a Denial Of Service attack. Thanks to
2675 Markus Stenberg of Cisco Systems, Inc. for reporting this issue.
2679 *) Fix DTLS memory leak in dtls1_buffer_record. A memory leak can occur in the
2680 dtls1_buffer_record function under certain conditions. In particular this
2681 could occur if an attacker sent repeated DTLS records with the same
2682 sequence number but for the next epoch. The memory leak could be exploited
2683 by an attacker in a Denial of Service attack through memory exhaustion.
2684 Thanks to Chris Mueller for reporting this issue.
2688 *) Fix issue where no-ssl3 configuration sets method to NULL. When openssl is
2689 built with the no-ssl3 option and a SSL v3 ClientHello is received the ssl
2690 method would be set to NULL which could later result in a NULL pointer
2691 dereference. Thanks to Frank Schmirler for reporting this issue.
2695 *) Abort handshake if server key exchange message is omitted for ephemeral
2698 Thanks to Karthikeyan Bhargavan of the PROSECCO team at INRIA for
2699 reporting this issue.
2703 *) Remove non-export ephemeral RSA code on client and server. This code
2704 violated the TLS standard by allowing the use of temporary RSA keys in
2705 non-export ciphersuites and could be used by a server to effectively
2706 downgrade the RSA key length used to a value smaller than the server
2707 certificate. Thanks for Karthikeyan Bhargavan of the PROSECCO team at
2708 INRIA or reporting this issue.
2712 *) Fixed issue where DH client certificates are accepted without verification.
2713 An OpenSSL server will accept a DH certificate for client authentication
2714 without the certificate verify message. This effectively allows a client to
2715 authenticate without the use of a private key. This only affects servers
2716 which trust a client certificate authority which issues certificates
2717 containing DH keys: these are extremely rare and hardly ever encountered.
2718 Thanks for Karthikeyan Bhargavan of the PROSECCO team at INRIA or reporting
2723 *) Ensure that the session ID context of an SSL is updated when its
2724 SSL_CTX is updated via SSL_set_SSL_CTX.
2726 The session ID context is typically set from the parent SSL_CTX,
2727 and can vary with the CTX.
2730 *) Fix various certificate fingerprint issues.
2732 By using non-DER or invalid encodings outside the signed portion of a
2733 certificate the fingerprint can be changed without breaking the signature.
2734 Although no details of the signed portion of the certificate can be changed
2735 this can cause problems with some applications: e.g. those using the
2736 certificate fingerprint for blacklists.
2738 1. Reject signatures with non zero unused bits.
2740 If the BIT STRING containing the signature has non zero unused bits reject
2741 the signature. All current signature algorithms require zero unused bits.
2743 2. Check certificate algorithm consistency.
2745 Check the AlgorithmIdentifier inside TBS matches the one in the
2746 certificate signature. NB: this will result in signature failure
2747 errors for some broken certificates.
2749 Thanks to Konrad Kraszewski from Google for reporting this issue.
2751 3. Check DSA/ECDSA signatures use DER.
2753 Re-encode DSA/ECDSA signatures and compare with the original received
2754 signature. Return an error if there is a mismatch.
2756 This will reject various cases including garbage after signature
2757 (thanks to Antti Karjalainen and Tuomo Untinen from the Codenomicon CROSS
2758 program for discovering this case) and use of BER or invalid ASN.1 INTEGERs
2759 (negative or with leading zeroes).
2761 Further analysis was conducted and fixes were developed by Stephen Henson
2762 of the OpenSSL core team.
2767 *) Correct Bignum squaring. Bignum squaring (BN_sqr) may produce incorrect
2768 results on some platforms, including x86_64. This bug occurs at random
2769 with a very low probability, and is not known to be exploitable in any
2770 way, though its exact impact is difficult to determine. Thanks to Pieter
2771 Wuille (Blockstream) who reported this issue and also suggested an initial
2772 fix. Further analysis was conducted by the OpenSSL development team and
2773 Adam Langley of Google. The final fix was developed by Andy Polyakov of
2774 the OpenSSL core team.
2778 *) Do not resume sessions on the server if the negotiated protocol
2779 version does not match the session's version. Resuming with a different
2780 version, while not strictly forbidden by the RFC, is of questionable
2781 sanity and breaks all known clients.
2782 [David Benjamin, Emilia Käsper]
2784 *) Tighten handling of the ChangeCipherSpec (CCS) message: reject
2785 early CCS messages during renegotiation. (Note that because
2786 renegotiation is encrypted, this early CCS was not exploitable.)
2789 *) Tighten client-side session ticket handling during renegotiation:
2790 ensure that the client only accepts a session ticket if the server sends
2791 the extension anew in the ServerHello. Previously, a TLS client would
2792 reuse the old extension state and thus accept a session ticket if one was
2793 announced in the initial ServerHello.
2795 Similarly, ensure that the client requires a session ticket if one
2796 was advertised in the ServerHello. Previously, a TLS client would
2797 ignore a missing NewSessionTicket message.
2800 Changes between 1.0.1i and 1.0.1j [15 Oct 2014]
2802 *) SRTP Memory Leak.
2804 A flaw in the DTLS SRTP extension parsing code allows an attacker, who
2805 sends a carefully crafted handshake message, to cause OpenSSL to fail
2806 to free up to 64k of memory causing a memory leak. This could be
2807 exploited in a Denial Of Service attack. This issue affects OpenSSL
2808 1.0.1 server implementations for both SSL/TLS and DTLS regardless of
2809 whether SRTP is used or configured. Implementations of OpenSSL that
2810 have been compiled with OPENSSL_NO_SRTP defined are not affected.
2812 The fix was developed by the OpenSSL team.
2816 *) Session Ticket Memory Leak.
2818 When an OpenSSL SSL/TLS/DTLS server receives a session ticket the
2819 integrity of that ticket is first verified. In the event of a session
2820 ticket integrity check failing, OpenSSL will fail to free memory
2821 causing a memory leak. By sending a large number of invalid session
2822 tickets an attacker could exploit this issue in a Denial Of Service
2827 *) Build option no-ssl3 is incomplete.
2829 When OpenSSL is configured with "no-ssl3" as a build option, servers
2830 could accept and complete a SSL 3.0 handshake, and clients could be
2831 configured to send them.
2833 [Akamai and the OpenSSL team]
2835 *) Add support for TLS_FALLBACK_SCSV.
2836 Client applications doing fallback retries should call
2837 SSL_set_mode(s, SSL_MODE_SEND_FALLBACK_SCSV).
2839 [Adam Langley, Bodo Moeller]
2841 *) Add additional DigestInfo checks.
2843 Re-encode DigestInto in DER and check against the original when
2844 verifying RSA signature: this will reject any improperly encoded
2845 DigestInfo structures.
2847 Note: this is a precautionary measure and no attacks are currently known.
2851 Changes between 1.0.1h and 1.0.1i [6 Aug 2014]
2853 *) Fix SRP buffer overrun vulnerability. Invalid parameters passed to the
2854 SRP code can be overrun an internal buffer. Add sanity check that
2855 g, A, B < N to SRP code.
2857 Thanks to Sean Devlin and Watson Ladd of Cryptography Services, NCC
2858 Group for discovering this issue.
2862 *) A flaw in the OpenSSL SSL/TLS server code causes the server to negotiate
2863 TLS 1.0 instead of higher protocol versions when the ClientHello message
2864 is badly fragmented. This allows a man-in-the-middle attacker to force a
2865 downgrade to TLS 1.0 even if both the server and the client support a
2866 higher protocol version, by modifying the client's TLS records.
2868 Thanks to David Benjamin and Adam Langley (Google) for discovering and
2869 researching this issue.
2873 *) OpenSSL DTLS clients enabling anonymous (EC)DH ciphersuites are subject
2874 to a denial of service attack. A malicious server can crash the client
2875 with a null pointer dereference (read) by specifying an anonymous (EC)DH
2876 ciphersuite and sending carefully crafted handshake messages.
2878 Thanks to Felix Gröbert (Google) for discovering and researching this
2883 *) By sending carefully crafted DTLS packets an attacker could cause openssl
2884 to leak memory. This can be exploited through a Denial of Service attack.
2885 Thanks to Adam Langley for discovering and researching this issue.
2889 *) An attacker can force openssl to consume large amounts of memory whilst
2890 processing DTLS handshake messages. This can be exploited through a
2891 Denial of Service attack.
2892 Thanks to Adam Langley for discovering and researching this issue.
2896 *) An attacker can force an error condition which causes openssl to crash
2897 whilst processing DTLS packets due to memory being freed twice. This
2898 can be exploited through a Denial of Service attack.
2899 Thanks to Adam Langley and Wan-Teh Chang for discovering and researching
2904 *) If a multithreaded client connects to a malicious server using a resumed
2905 session and the server sends an ec point format extension it could write
2906 up to 255 bytes to freed memory.
2908 Thanks to Gabor Tyukasz (LogMeIn Inc) for discovering and researching this
2913 *) A malicious server can crash an OpenSSL client with a null pointer
2914 dereference (read) by specifying an SRP ciphersuite even though it was not
2915 properly negotiated with the client. This can be exploited through a
2916 Denial of Service attack.
2918 Thanks to Joonas Kuorilehto and Riku Hietamäki (Codenomicon) for
2919 discovering and researching this issue.
2923 *) A flaw in OBJ_obj2txt may cause pretty printing functions such as
2924 X509_name_oneline, X509_name_print_ex et al. to leak some information
2925 from the stack. Applications may be affected if they echo pretty printing
2926 output to the attacker.
2928 Thanks to Ivan Fratric (Google) for discovering this issue.
2930 [Emilia Käsper, and Steve Henson]
2932 *) Fix ec_GFp_simple_points_make_affine (thus, EC_POINTs_mul etc.)
2933 for corner cases. (Certain input points at infinity could lead to
2934 bogus results, with non-infinity inputs mapped to infinity too.)
2937 Changes between 1.0.1g and 1.0.1h [5 Jun 2014]
2939 *) Fix for SSL/TLS MITM flaw. An attacker using a carefully crafted
2940 handshake can force the use of weak keying material in OpenSSL
2941 SSL/TLS clients and servers.
2943 Thanks to KIKUCHI Masashi (Lepidum Co. Ltd.) for discovering and
2944 researching this issue. (CVE-2014-0224)
2945 [KIKUCHI Masashi, Steve Henson]
2947 *) Fix DTLS recursion flaw. By sending an invalid DTLS handshake to an
2948 OpenSSL DTLS client the code can be made to recurse eventually crashing
2951 Thanks to Imre Rad (Search-Lab Ltd.) for discovering this issue.
2953 [Imre Rad, Steve Henson]
2955 *) Fix DTLS invalid fragment vulnerability. A buffer overrun attack can
2956 be triggered by sending invalid DTLS fragments to an OpenSSL DTLS
2957 client or server. This is potentially exploitable to run arbitrary
2958 code on a vulnerable client or server.
2960 Thanks to Jüri Aedla for reporting this issue. (CVE-2014-0195)
2961 [Jüri Aedla, Steve Henson]
2963 *) Fix bug in TLS code where clients enable anonymous ECDH ciphersuites
2964 are subject to a denial of service attack.
2966 Thanks to Felix Gröbert and Ivan Fratric at Google for discovering
2967 this issue. (CVE-2014-3470)
2968 [Felix Gröbert, Ivan Fratric, Steve Henson]
2970 *) Harmonize version and its documentation. -f flag is used to display
2972 [mancha <mancha1@zoho.com>]
2974 *) Fix eckey_priv_encode so it immediately returns an error upon a failure
2975 in i2d_ECPrivateKey.
2976 [mancha <mancha1@zoho.com>]
2978 *) Fix some double frees. These are not thought to be exploitable.
2979 [mancha <mancha1@zoho.com>]
2981 Changes between 1.0.1f and 1.0.1g [7 Apr 2014]
2983 *) A missing bounds check in the handling of the TLS heartbeat extension
2984 can be used to reveal up to 64k of memory to a connected client or
2987 Thanks for Neel Mehta of Google Security for discovering this bug and to
2988 Adam Langley <agl@chromium.org> and Bodo Moeller <bmoeller@acm.org> for
2989 preparing the fix (CVE-2014-0160)
2990 [Adam Langley, Bodo Moeller]
2992 *) Fix for the attack described in the paper "Recovering OpenSSL
2993 ECDSA Nonces Using the FLUSH+RELOAD Cache Side-channel Attack"
2994 by Yuval Yarom and Naomi Benger. Details can be obtained from:
2995 http://eprint.iacr.org/2014/140
2997 Thanks to Yuval Yarom and Naomi Benger for discovering this
2998 flaw and to Yuval Yarom for supplying a fix (CVE-2014-0076)
2999 [Yuval Yarom and Naomi Benger]
3001 *) TLS pad extension: draft-agl-tls-padding-03
3003 Workaround for the "TLS hang bug" (see FAQ and PR#2771): if the
3004 TLS client Hello record length value would otherwise be > 255 and
3005 less that 512 pad with a dummy extension containing zeroes so it
3006 is at least 512 bytes long.
3008 [Adam Langley, Steve Henson]
3010 Changes between 1.0.1e and 1.0.1f [6 Jan 2014]
3012 *) Fix for TLS record tampering bug. A carefully crafted invalid
3013 handshake could crash OpenSSL with a NULL pointer exception.
3014 Thanks to Anton Johansson for reporting this issues.
3017 *) Keep original DTLS digest and encryption contexts in retransmission
3018 structures so we can use the previous session parameters if they need
3019 to be resent. (CVE-2013-6450)
3022 *) Add option SSL_OP_SAFARI_ECDHE_ECDSA_BUG (part of SSL_OP_ALL) which
3023 avoids preferring ECDHE-ECDSA ciphers when the client appears to be
3024 Safari on OS X. Safari on OS X 10.8..10.8.3 advertises support for
3025 several ECDHE-ECDSA ciphers, but fails to negotiate them. The bug
3026 is fixed in OS X 10.8.4, but Apple have ruled out both hot fixing
3027 10.8..10.8.3 and forcing users to upgrade to 10.8.4 or newer.
3028 [Rob Stradling, Adam Langley]
3030 Changes between 1.0.1d and 1.0.1e [11 Feb 2013]
3032 *) Correct fix for CVE-2013-0169. The original didn't work on AES-NI
3033 supporting platforms or when small records were transferred.
3034 [Andy Polyakov, Steve Henson]
3036 Changes between 1.0.1c and 1.0.1d [5 Feb 2013]
3038 *) Make the decoding of SSLv3, TLS and DTLS CBC records constant time.
3040 This addresses the flaw in CBC record processing discovered by
3041 Nadhem Alfardan and Kenny Paterson. Details of this attack can be found
3042 at: http://www.isg.rhul.ac.uk/tls/
3044 Thanks go to Nadhem Alfardan and Kenny Paterson of the Information
3045 Security Group at Royal Holloway, University of London
3046 (www.isg.rhul.ac.uk) for discovering this flaw and Adam Langley and
3047 Emilia Käsper for the initial patch.
3049 [Emilia Käsper, Adam Langley, Ben Laurie, Andy Polyakov, Steve Henson]
3051 *) Fix flaw in AESNI handling of TLS 1.2 and 1.1 records for CBC mode
3052 ciphersuites which can be exploited in a denial of service attack.
3053 Thanks go to and to Adam Langley <agl@chromium.org> for discovering
3054 and detecting this bug and to Wolfgang Ettlinger
3055 <wolfgang.ettlinger@gmail.com> for independently discovering this issue.
3059 *) Return an error when checking OCSP signatures when key is NULL.
3060 This fixes a DoS attack. (CVE-2013-0166)
3063 *) Make openssl verify return errors.
3064 [Chris Palmer <palmer@google.com> and Ben Laurie]
3066 *) Call OCSP Stapling callback after ciphersuite has been chosen, so
3067 the right response is stapled. Also change SSL_get_certificate()
3068 so it returns the certificate actually sent.
3069 See http://rt.openssl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=2836.
3070 [Rob Stradling <rob.stradling@comodo.com>]
3072 *) Fix possible deadlock when decoding public keys.
3075 *) Don't use TLS 1.0 record version number in initial client hello
3079 Changes between 1.0.1b and 1.0.1c [10 May 2012]
3081 *) Sanity check record length before skipping explicit IV in TLS
3082 1.2, 1.1 and DTLS to fix DoS attack.
3084 Thanks to Codenomicon for discovering this issue using Fuzz-o-Matic
3085 fuzzing as a service testing platform.
3089 *) Initialise tkeylen properly when encrypting CMS messages.
3090 Thanks to Solar Designer of Openwall for reporting this issue.
3093 *) In FIPS mode don't try to use composite ciphers as they are not
3097 Changes between 1.0.1a and 1.0.1b [26 Apr 2012]
3099 *) OpenSSL 1.0.0 sets SSL_OP_ALL to 0x80000FFFL and OpenSSL 1.0.1 and
3100 1.0.1a set SSL_OP_NO_TLSv1_1 to 0x00000400L which would unfortunately
3101 mean any application compiled against OpenSSL 1.0.0 headers setting
3102 SSL_OP_ALL would also set SSL_OP_NO_TLSv1_1, unintentionally disabling
3103 TLS 1.1 also. Fix this by changing the value of SSL_OP_NO_TLSv1_1 to
3104 0x10000000L Any application which was previously compiled against
3105 OpenSSL 1.0.1 or 1.0.1a headers and which cares about SSL_OP_NO_TLSv1_1
3106 will need to be recompiled as a result. Letting be results in
3107 inability to disable specifically TLS 1.1 and in client context,
3108 in unlike event, limit maximum offered version to TLS 1.0 [see below].
3111 *) In order to ensure interoperability SSL_OP_NO_protocolX does not
3112 disable just protocol X, but all protocols above X *if* there are
3113 protocols *below* X still enabled. In more practical terms it means
3114 that if application wants to disable TLS1.0 in favor of TLS1.1 and
3115 above, it's not sufficient to pass SSL_OP_NO_TLSv1, one has to pass
3116 SSL_OP_NO_TLSv1|SSL_OP_NO_SSLv3|SSL_OP_NO_SSLv2. This applies to
3120 Changes between 1.0.1 and 1.0.1a [19 Apr 2012]
3122 *) Check for potentially exploitable overflows in asn1_d2i_read_bio
3123 BUF_mem_grow and BUF_mem_grow_clean. Refuse attempts to shrink buffer
3124 in CRYPTO_realloc_clean.
3126 Thanks to Tavis Ormandy, Google Security Team, for discovering this
3127 issue and to Adam Langley <agl@chromium.org> for fixing it.
3129 [Adam Langley (Google), Tavis Ormandy, Google Security Team]
3131 *) Don't allow TLS 1.2 SHA-256 ciphersuites in TLS 1.0, 1.1 connections.
3134 *) Workarounds for some broken servers that "hang" if a client hello
3135 record length exceeds 255 bytes.
3137 1. Do not use record version number > TLS 1.0 in initial client
3138 hello: some (but not all) hanging servers will now work.
3139 2. If we set OPENSSL_MAX_TLS1_2_CIPHER_LENGTH this will truncate
3140 the number of ciphers sent in the client hello. This should be
3141 set to an even number, such as 50, for example by passing:
3142 -DOPENSSL_MAX_TLS1_2_CIPHER_LENGTH=50 to config or Configure.
3143 Most broken servers should now work.
3144 3. If all else fails setting OPENSSL_NO_TLS1_2_CLIENT will disable
3145 TLS 1.2 client support entirely.
3148 *) Fix SEGV in Vector Permutation AES module observed in OpenSSH.
3151 Changes between 1.0.0h and 1.0.1 [14 Mar 2012]
3153 *) Add compatibility with old MDC2 signatures which use an ASN1 OCTET
3154 STRING form instead of a DigestInfo.
3157 *) The format used for MDC2 RSA signatures is inconsistent between EVP
3158 and the RSA_sign/RSA_verify functions. This was made more apparent when
3159 OpenSSL used RSA_sign/RSA_verify for some RSA signatures in particular
3160 those which went through EVP_PKEY_METHOD in 1.0.0 and later. Detect
3161 the correct format in RSA_verify so both forms transparently work.
3164 *) Some servers which support TLS 1.0 can choke if we initially indicate
3165 support for TLS 1.2 and later renegotiate using TLS 1.0 in the RSA
3166 encrypted premaster secret. As a workaround use the maximum permitted
3167 client version in client hello, this should keep such servers happy
3168 and still work with previous versions of OpenSSL.
3171 *) Add support for TLS/DTLS heartbeats.
3172 [Robin Seggelmann <seggelmann@fh-muenster.de>]
3174 *) Add support for SCTP.
3175 [Robin Seggelmann <seggelmann@fh-muenster.de>]
3177 *) Improved PRNG seeding for VOS.
3178 [Paul Green <Paul.Green@stratus.com>]
3180 *) Extensive assembler packs updates, most notably:
3182 - x86[_64]: AES-NI, PCLMULQDQ, RDRAND support;
3183 - x86[_64]: SSSE3 support (SHA1, vector-permutation AES);
3184 - x86_64: bit-sliced AES implementation;
3185 - ARM: NEON support, contemporary platforms optimizations;
3186 - s390x: z196 support;
3187 - *: GHASH and GF(2^m) multiplication implementations;
3191 *) Make TLS-SRP code conformant with RFC 5054 API cleanup
3192 (removal of unnecessary code)
3193 [Peter Sylvester <peter.sylvester@edelweb.fr>]
3195 *) Add TLS key material exporter from RFC 5705.
3198 *) Add DTLS-SRTP negotiation from RFC 5764.
3201 *) Add Next Protocol Negotiation,
3202 http://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-agl-tls-nextprotoneg-00. Can be
3203 disabled with a no-npn flag to config or Configure. Code donated
3205 [Adam Langley <agl@google.com> and Ben Laurie]
3207 *) Add optional 64-bit optimized implementations of elliptic curves NIST-P224,
3208 NIST-P256, NIST-P521, with constant-time single point multiplication on
3209 typical inputs. Compiler support for the nonstandard type __uint128_t is
3210 required to use this (present in gcc 4.4 and later, for 64-bit builds).
3211 Code made available under Apache License version 2.0.
3213 Specify "enable-ec_nistp_64_gcc_128" on the Configure (or config) command
3214 line to include this in your build of OpenSSL, and run "make depend" (or
3215 "make update"). This enables the following EC_METHODs:
3217 EC_GFp_nistp224_method()
3218 EC_GFp_nistp256_method()
3219 EC_GFp_nistp521_method()
3221 EC_GROUP_new_by_curve_name() will automatically use these (while
3222 EC_GROUP_new_curve_GFp() currently prefers the more flexible
3224 [Emilia Käsper, Adam Langley, Bodo Moeller (Google)]
3226 *) Use type ossl_ssize_t instad of ssize_t which isn't available on
3227 all platforms. Move ssize_t definition from e_os.h to the public
3228 header file e_os2.h as it now appears in public header file cms.h
3231 *) New -sigopt option to the ca, req and x509 utilities. Additional
3232 signature parameters can be passed using this option and in
3236 *) Add RSA PSS signing function. This will generate and set the
3237 appropriate AlgorithmIdentifiers for PSS based on those in the
3238 corresponding EVP_MD_CTX structure. No application support yet.
3241 *) Support for companion algorithm specific ASN1 signing routines.
3242 New function ASN1_item_sign_ctx() signs a pre-initialised
3243 EVP_MD_CTX structure and sets AlgorithmIdentifiers based on
3244 the appropriate parameters.
3247 *) Add new algorithm specific ASN1 verification initialisation function
3248 to EVP_PKEY_ASN1_METHOD: this is not in EVP_PKEY_METHOD since the ASN1
3249 handling will be the same no matter what EVP_PKEY_METHOD is used.
3250 Add a PSS handler to support verification of PSS signatures: checked
3251 against a number of sample certificates.
3254 *) Add signature printing for PSS. Add PSS OIDs.
3255 [Steve Henson, Martin Kaiser <lists@kaiser.cx>]
3257 *) Add algorithm specific signature printing. An individual ASN1 method
3258 can now print out signatures instead of the standard hex dump.
3260 More complex signatures (e.g. PSS) can print out more meaningful
3261 information. Include DSA version that prints out the signature
3265 *) Password based recipient info support for CMS library: implementing
3269 *) Split password based encryption into PBES2 and PBKDF2 functions. This
3270 neatly separates the code into cipher and PBE sections and is required
3271 for some algorithms that split PBES2 into separate pieces (such as
3272 password based CMS).
3275 *) Session-handling fixes:
3276 - Fix handling of connections that are resuming with a session ID,
3277 but also support Session Tickets.
3278 - Fix a bug that suppressed issuing of a new ticket if the client
3279 presented a ticket with an expired session.
3280 - Try to set the ticket lifetime hint to something reasonable.
3281 - Make tickets shorter by excluding irrelevant information.
3282 - On the client side, don't ignore renewed tickets.
3283 [Adam Langley, Bodo Moeller (Google)]
3285 *) Fix PSK session representation.
3288 *) Add RC4-MD5 and AESNI-SHA1 "stitched" implementations.
3290 This work was sponsored by Intel.
3293 *) Add GCM support to TLS library. Some custom code is needed to split
3294 the IV between the fixed (from PRF) and explicit (from TLS record)
3295 portions. This adds all GCM ciphersuites supported by RFC5288 and
3296 RFC5289. Generalise some AES* cipherstrings to include GCM and
3297 add a special AESGCM string for GCM only.
3300 *) Expand range of ctrls for AES GCM. Permit setting invocation
3301 field on decrypt and retrieval of invocation field only on encrypt.
3304 *) Add HMAC ECC ciphersuites from RFC5289. Include SHA384 PRF support.
3305 As required by RFC5289 these ciphersuites cannot be used if for
3306 versions of TLS earlier than 1.2.
3309 *) For FIPS capable OpenSSL interpret a NULL default public key method
3310 as unset and return the appropriate default but do *not* set the default.
3311 This means we can return the appropriate method in applications that
3312 switch between FIPS and non-FIPS modes.
3315 *) Redirect HMAC and CMAC operations to FIPS module in FIPS mode. If an
3316 ENGINE is used then we cannot handle that in the FIPS module so we
3317 keep original code iff non-FIPS operations are allowed.
3320 *) Add -attime option to openssl utilities.
3321 [Peter Eckersley <pde@eff.org>, Ben Laurie and Steve Henson]
3323 *) Redirect DSA and DH operations to FIPS module in FIPS mode.
3326 *) Redirect ECDSA and ECDH operations to FIPS module in FIPS mode. Also use
3327 FIPS EC methods unconditionally for now.
3330 *) New build option no-ec2m to disable characteristic 2 code.
3333 *) Backport libcrypto audit of return value checking from 1.1.0-dev; not
3334 all cases can be covered as some introduce binary incompatibilities.
3337 *) Redirect RSA operations to FIPS module including keygen,
3338 encrypt, decrypt, sign and verify. Block use of non FIPS RSA methods.
3341 *) Add similar low level API blocking to ciphers.
3344 *) Low level digest APIs are not approved in FIPS mode: any attempt
3345 to use these will cause a fatal error. Applications that *really* want
3346 to use them can use the private_* version instead.
3349 *) Redirect cipher operations to FIPS module for FIPS builds.
3352 *) Redirect digest operations to FIPS module for FIPS builds.
3355 *) Update build system to add "fips" flag which will link in fipscanister.o
3356 for static and shared library builds embedding a signature if needed.
3359 *) Output TLS supported curves in preference order instead of numerical
3360 order. This is currently hardcoded for the highest order curves first.
3361 This should be configurable so applications can judge speed vs strength.
3364 *) Add TLS v1.2 server support for client authentication.
3367 *) Add support for FIPS mode in ssl library: disable SSLv3, non-FIPS ciphers
3371 *) Functions FIPS_mode_set() and FIPS_mode() which call the underlying
3372 FIPS modules versions.
3375 *) Add TLS v1.2 client side support for client authentication. Keep cache
3376 of handshake records longer as we don't know the hash algorithm to use
3377 until after the certificate request message is received.
3380 *) Initial TLS v1.2 client support. Add a default signature algorithms
3381 extension including all the algorithms we support. Parse new signature
3382 format in client key exchange. Relax some ECC signing restrictions for
3383 TLS v1.2 as indicated in RFC5246.
3386 *) Add server support for TLS v1.2 signature algorithms extension. Switch
3387 to new signature format when needed using client digest preference.
3388 All server ciphersuites should now work correctly in TLS v1.2. No client
3389 support yet and no support for client certificates.
3392 *) Initial TLS v1.2 support. Add new SHA256 digest to ssl code, switch
3393 to SHA256 for PRF when using TLS v1.2 and later. Add new SHA256 based
3394 ciphersuites. At present only RSA key exchange ciphersuites work with
3395 TLS v1.2. Add new option for TLS v1.2 replacing the old and obsolete
3396 SSL_OP_PKCS1_CHECK flags with SSL_OP_NO_TLSv1_2. New TLSv1.2 methods
3397 and version checking.
3400 *) New option OPENSSL_NO_SSL_INTERN. If an application can be compiled
3401 with this defined it will not be affected by any changes to ssl internal
3402 structures. Add several utility functions to allow openssl application
3403 to work with OPENSSL_NO_SSL_INTERN defined.
3406 *) A long standing patch to add support for SRP from EdelWeb (Peter
3407 Sylvester and Christophe Renou) was integrated.
3408 [Christophe Renou <christophe.renou@edelweb.fr>, Peter Sylvester
3409 <peter.sylvester@edelweb.fr>, Tom Wu <tjw@cs.stanford.edu>, and
3412 *) Add functions to copy EVP_PKEY_METHOD and retrieve flags and id.
3415 *) Permit abbreviated handshakes when renegotiating using the function
3416 SSL_renegotiate_abbreviated().
3417 [Robin Seggelmann <seggelmann@fh-muenster.de>]
3419 *) Add call to ENGINE_register_all_complete() to
3420 ENGINE_load_builtin_engines(), so some implementations get used
3421 automatically instead of needing explicit application support.
3424 *) Add support for TLS key exporter as described in RFC5705.
3425 [Robin Seggelmann <seggelmann@fh-muenster.de>, Steve Henson]
3427 *) Initial TLSv1.1 support. Since TLSv1.1 is very similar to TLS v1.0 only
3428 a few changes are required:
3430 Add SSL_OP_NO_TLSv1_1 flag.
3431 Add TLSv1_1 methods.
3432 Update version checking logic to handle version 1.1.
3433 Add explicit IV handling (ported from DTLS code).
3434 Add command line options to s_client/s_server.
3437 Changes between 1.0.0g and 1.0.0h [12 Mar 2012]
3439 *) Fix MMA (Bleichenbacher's attack on PKCS #1 v1.5 RSA padding) weakness
3440 in CMS and PKCS7 code. When RSA decryption fails use a random key for
3441 content decryption and always return the same error. Note: this attack
3442 needs on average 2^20 messages so it only affects automated senders. The
3443 old behaviour can be re-enabled in the CMS code by setting the
3444 CMS_DEBUG_DECRYPT flag: this is useful for debugging and testing where
3445 an MMA defence is not necessary.
3446 Thanks to Ivan Nestlerode <inestlerode@us.ibm.com> for discovering
3447 this issue. (CVE-2012-0884)
3450 *) Fix CVE-2011-4619: make sure we really are receiving a
3451 client hello before rejecting multiple SGC restarts. Thanks to
3452 Ivan Nestlerode <inestlerode@us.ibm.com> for discovering this bug.
3455 Changes between 1.0.0f and 1.0.0g [18 Jan 2012]
3457 *) Fix for DTLS DoS issue introduced by fix for CVE-2011-4109.
3458 Thanks to Antonio Martin, Enterprise Secure Access Research and
3459 Development, Cisco Systems, Inc. for discovering this bug and
3460 preparing a fix. (CVE-2012-0050)
3463 Changes between 1.0.0e and 1.0.0f [4 Jan 2012]
3465 *) Nadhem Alfardan and Kenny Paterson have discovered an extension
3466 of the Vaudenay padding oracle attack on CBC mode encryption
3467 which enables an efficient plaintext recovery attack against
3468 the OpenSSL implementation of DTLS. Their attack exploits timing
3469 differences arising during decryption processing. A research
3470 paper describing this attack can be found at:
3471 http://www.isg.rhul.ac.uk/~kp/dtls.pdf
3472 Thanks go to Nadhem Alfardan and Kenny Paterson of the Information
3473 Security Group at Royal Holloway, University of London
3474 (www.isg.rhul.ac.uk) for discovering this flaw and to Robin Seggelmann
3475 <seggelmann@fh-muenster.de> and Michael Tuexen <tuexen@fh-muenster.de>
3476 for preparing the fix. (CVE-2011-4108)
3477 [Robin Seggelmann, Michael Tuexen]
3479 *) Clear bytes used for block padding of SSL 3.0 records.
3481 [Adam Langley (Google)]
3483 *) Only allow one SGC handshake restart for SSL/TLS. Thanks to George
3484 Kadianakis <desnacked@gmail.com> for discovering this issue and
3485 Adam Langley for preparing the fix. (CVE-2011-4619)
3486 [Adam Langley (Google)]
3488 *) Check parameters are not NULL in GOST ENGINE. (CVE-2012-0027)
3489 [Andrey Kulikov <amdeich@gmail.com>]
3491 *) Prevent malformed RFC3779 data triggering an assertion failure.
3492 Thanks to Andrew Chi, BBN Technologies, for discovering the flaw
3493 and Rob Austein <sra@hactrn.net> for fixing it. (CVE-2011-4577)
3494 [Rob Austein <sra@hactrn.net>]
3496 *) Improved PRNG seeding for VOS.
3497 [Paul Green <Paul.Green@stratus.com>]
3499 *) Fix ssl_ciph.c set-up race.
3500 [Adam Langley (Google)]
3502 *) Fix spurious failures in ecdsatest.c.
3503 [Emilia Käsper (Google)]
3505 *) Fix the BIO_f_buffer() implementation (which was mixing different
3506 interpretations of the '..._len' fields).
3507 [Adam Langley (Google)]
3509 *) Fix handling of BN_BLINDING: now BN_BLINDING_invert_ex (rather than
3510 BN_BLINDING_invert_ex) calls BN_BLINDING_update, ensuring that concurrent
3511 threads won't reuse the same blinding coefficients.
3513 This also avoids the need to obtain the CRYPTO_LOCK_RSA_BLINDING
3514 lock to call BN_BLINDING_invert_ex, and avoids one use of
3515 BN_BLINDING_update for each BN_BLINDING structure (previously,
3516 the last update always remained unused).
3517 [Emilia Käsper (Google)]
3519 *) In ssl3_clear, preserve s3->init_extra along with s3->rbuf.
3520 [Bob Buckholz (Google)]
3522 Changes between 1.0.0d and 1.0.0e [6 Sep 2011]
3524 *) Fix bug where CRLs with nextUpdate in the past are sometimes accepted
3525 by initialising X509_STORE_CTX properly. (CVE-2011-3207)
3526 [Kaspar Brand <ossl@velox.ch>]
3528 *) Fix SSL memory handling for (EC)DH ciphersuites, in particular
3529 for multi-threaded use of ECDH. (CVE-2011-3210)
3530 [Adam Langley (Google)]
3532 *) Fix x509_name_ex_d2i memory leak on bad inputs.
3535 *) Remove hard coded ecdsaWithSHA1 signature tests in ssl code and check
3536 signature public key algorithm by using OID xref utilities instead.
3537 Before this you could only use some ECC ciphersuites with SHA1 only.
3540 *) Add protection against ECDSA timing attacks as mentioned in the paper
3541 by Billy Bob Brumley and Nicola Tuveri, see:
3543 http://eprint.iacr.org/2011/232.pdf
3545 [Billy Bob Brumley and Nicola Tuveri]
3547 Changes between 1.0.0c and 1.0.0d [8 Feb 2011]
3549 *) Fix parsing of OCSP stapling ClientHello extension. CVE-2011-0014
3550 [Neel Mehta, Adam Langley, Bodo Moeller (Google)]
3552 *) Fix bug in string printing code: if *any* escaping is enabled we must
3553 escape the escape character (backslash) or the resulting string is
3557 Changes between 1.0.0b and 1.0.0c [2 Dec 2010]
3559 *) Disable code workaround for ancient and obsolete Netscape browsers
3560 and servers: an attacker can use it in a ciphersuite downgrade attack.
3561 Thanks to Martin Rex for discovering this bug. CVE-2010-4180
3564 *) Fixed J-PAKE implementation error, originally discovered by
3565 Sebastien Martini, further info and confirmation from Stefan
3566 Arentz and Feng Hao. Note that this fix is a security fix. CVE-2010-4252
3569 Changes between 1.0.0a and 1.0.0b [16 Nov 2010]
3571 *) Fix extension code to avoid race conditions which can result in a buffer
3572 overrun vulnerability: resumed sessions must not be modified as they can
3573 be shared by multiple threads. CVE-2010-3864
3576 *) Fix WIN32 build system to correctly link an ENGINE directory into
3580 Changes between 1.0.0 and 1.0.0a [01 Jun 2010]
3582 *) Check return value of int_rsa_verify in pkey_rsa_verifyrecover
3584 [Steve Henson, Peter-Michael Hager <hager@dortmund.net>]
3586 Changes between 0.9.8n and 1.0.0 [29 Mar 2010]
3588 *) Add "missing" function EVP_CIPHER_CTX_copy(). This copies a cipher
3589 context. The operation can be customised via the ctrl mechanism in
3590 case ENGINEs want to include additional functionality.
3593 *) Tolerate yet another broken PKCS#8 key format: private key value negative.
3596 *) Add new -subject_hash_old and -issuer_hash_old options to x509 utility to
3597 output hashes compatible with older versions of OpenSSL.
3598 [Willy Weisz <weisz@vcpc.univie.ac.at>]
3600 *) Fix compression algorithm handling: if resuming a session use the
3601 compression algorithm of the resumed session instead of determining
3602 it from client hello again. Don't allow server to change algorithm.
3605 *) Add load_crls() function to apps tidying load_certs() too. Add option
3606 to verify utility to allow additional CRLs to be included.
3609 *) Update OCSP request code to permit adding custom headers to the request:
3610 some responders need this.
3613 *) The function EVP_PKEY_sign() returns <=0 on error: check return code
3615 [Julia Lawall <julia@diku.dk>]
3617 *) Update verify callback code in apps/s_cb.c and apps/verify.c, it
3618 needlessly dereferenced structures, used obsolete functions and
3619 didn't handle all updated verify codes correctly.
3622 *) Disable MD2 in the default configuration.
3625 *) In BIO_pop() and BIO_push() use the ctrl argument (which was NULL) to
3626 indicate the initial BIO being pushed or popped. This makes it possible
3627 to determine whether the BIO is the one explicitly called or as a result
3628 of the ctrl being passed down the chain. Fix BIO_pop() and SSL BIOs so
3629 it handles reference counts correctly and doesn't zero out the I/O bio
3630 when it is not being explicitly popped. WARNING: applications which
3631 included workarounds for the old buggy behaviour will need to be modified
3632 or they could free up already freed BIOs.
3635 *) Extend the uni2asc/asc2uni => OPENSSL_uni2asc/OPENSSL_asc2uni
3636 renaming to all platforms (within the 0.9.8 branch, this was
3637 done conditionally on Netware platforms to avoid a name clash).
3638 [Guenter <lists@gknw.net>]
3640 *) Add ECDHE and PSK support to DTLS.
3641 [Michael Tuexen <tuexen@fh-muenster.de>]
3643 *) Add CHECKED_STACK_OF macro to safestack.h, otherwise safestack can't
3647 *) Add "missing" function EVP_MD_flags() (without this the only way to
3648 retrieve a digest flags is by accessing the structure directly. Update
3649 EVP_MD_do_all*() and EVP_CIPHER_do_all*() to include the name a digest
3650 or cipher is registered as in the "from" argument. Print out all
3651 registered digests in the dgst usage message instead of manually
3652 attempting to work them out.
3655 *) If no SSLv2 ciphers are used don't use an SSLv2 compatible client hello:
3656 this allows the use of compression and extensions. Change default cipher
3657 string to remove SSLv2 ciphersuites. This effectively avoids ancient SSLv2
3658 by default unless an application cipher string requests it.
3661 *) Alter match criteria in PKCS12_parse(). It used to try to use local
3662 key ids to find matching certificates and keys but some PKCS#12 files
3663 don't follow the (somewhat unwritten) rules and this strategy fails.
3664 Now just gather all certificates together and the first private key
3665 then look for the first certificate that matches the key.
3668 *) Support use of registered digest and cipher names for dgst and cipher
3669 commands instead of having to add each one as a special case. So now
3676 openssl dgst -sha256 foo
3678 and this works for ENGINE based algorithms too.
3682 *) Update Gost ENGINE to support parameter files.
3683 [Victor B. Wagner <vitus@cryptocom.ru>]
3685 *) Support GeneralizedTime in ca utility.
3686 [Oliver Martin <oliver@volatilevoid.net>, Steve Henson]
3688 *) Enhance the hash format used for certificate directory links. The new
3689 form uses the canonical encoding (meaning equivalent names will work
3690 even if they aren't identical) and uses SHA1 instead of MD5. This form
3691 is incompatible with the older format and as a result c_rehash should
3692 be used to rebuild symbolic links.
3695 *) Make PKCS#8 the default write format for private keys, replacing the
3696 traditional format. This form is standardised, more secure and doesn't
3697 include an implicit MD5 dependency.
3700 *) Add a $gcc_devteam_warn option to Configure. The idea is that any code
3701 committed to OpenSSL should pass this lot as a minimum.
3704 *) Add session ticket override functionality for use by EAP-FAST.
3705 [Jouni Malinen <j@w1.fi>]
3707 *) Modify HMAC functions to return a value. Since these can be implemented
3708 in an ENGINE errors can occur.
3711 *) Type-checked OBJ_bsearch_ex.
3714 *) Type-checked OBJ_bsearch. Also some constification necessitated
3715 by type-checking. Still to come: TXT_DB, bsearch(?),
3716 OBJ_bsearch_ex, qsort, CRYPTO_EX_DATA, ASN1_VALUE, ASN1_STRING,
3720 *) New function OPENSSL_gmtime_adj() to add a specific number of days and
3721 seconds to a tm structure directly, instead of going through OS
3722 specific date routines. This avoids any issues with OS routines such
3723 as the year 2038 bug. New *_adj() functions for ASN1 time structures
3724 and X509_time_adj_ex() to cover the extended range. The existing
3725 X509_time_adj() is still usable and will no longer have any date issues.
3728 *) Delta CRL support. New use deltas option which will attempt to locate
3729 and search any appropriate delta CRLs available.
3731 This work was sponsored by Google.
3734 *) Support for CRLs partitioned by reason code. Reorganise CRL processing
3735 code and add additional score elements. Validate alternate CRL paths
3736 as part of the CRL checking and indicate a new error "CRL path validation
3737 error" in this case. Applications wanting additional details can use
3738 the verify callback and check the new "parent" field. If this is not
3739 NULL CRL path validation is taking place. Existing applications won't
3740 see this because it requires extended CRL support which is off by
3743 This work was sponsored by Google.
3746 *) Support for freshest CRL extension.
3748 This work was sponsored by Google.
3751 *) Initial indirect CRL support. Currently only supported in the CRLs
3752 passed directly and not via lookup. Process certificate issuer
3753 CRL entry extension and lookup CRL entries by bother issuer name
3754 and serial number. Check and process CRL issuer entry in IDP extension.
3756 This work was sponsored by Google.
3759 *) Add support for distinct certificate and CRL paths. The CRL issuer
3760 certificate is validated separately in this case. Only enabled if
3761 an extended CRL support flag is set: this flag will enable additional
3762 CRL functionality in future.
3764 This work was sponsored by Google.
3767 *) Add support for policy mappings extension.
3769 This work was sponsored by Google.
3772 *) Fixes to pathlength constraint, self issued certificate handling,
3773 policy processing to align with RFC3280 and PKITS tests.
3775 This work was sponsored by Google.
3778 *) Support for name constraints certificate extension. DN, email, DNS
3779 and URI types are currently supported.
3781 This work was sponsored by Google.
3784 *) To cater for systems that provide a pointer-based thread ID rather
3785 than numeric, deprecate the current numeric thread ID mechanism and
3786 replace it with a structure and associated callback type. This
3787 mechanism allows a numeric "hash" to be extracted from a thread ID in
3788 either case, and on platforms where pointers are larger than 'long',
3789 mixing is done to help ensure the numeric 'hash' is usable even if it
3790 can't be guaranteed unique. The default mechanism is to use "&errno"
3791 as a pointer-based thread ID to distinguish between threads.
3793 Applications that want to provide their own thread IDs should now use
3794 CRYPTO_THREADID_set_callback() to register a callback that will call
3795 either CRYPTO_THREADID_set_numeric() or CRYPTO_THREADID_set_pointer().
3797 Note that ERR_remove_state() is now deprecated, because it is tied
3798 to the assumption that thread IDs are numeric. ERR_remove_state(0)
3799 to free the current thread's error state should be replaced by
3800 ERR_remove_thread_state(NULL).
3802 (This new approach replaces the functions CRYPTO_set_idptr_callback(),
3803 CRYPTO_get_idptr_callback(), and CRYPTO_thread_idptr() that existed in
3804 OpenSSL 0.9.9-dev between June 2006 and August 2008. Also, if an
3805 application was previously providing a numeric thread callback that
3806 was inappropriate for distinguishing threads, then uniqueness might
3807 have been obtained with &errno that happened immediately in the
3808 intermediate development versions of OpenSSL; this is no longer the
3809 case, the numeric thread callback will now override the automatic use
3811 [Geoff Thorpe, with help from Bodo Moeller]
3813 *) Initial support for different CRL issuing certificates. This covers a
3814 simple case where the self issued certificates in the chain exist and
3815 the real CRL issuer is higher in the existing chain.
3817 This work was sponsored by Google.
3820 *) Removed effectively defunct crypto/store from the build.
3823 *) Revamp of STACK to provide stronger type-checking. Still to come:
3824 TXT_DB, bsearch(?), OBJ_bsearch, qsort, CRYPTO_EX_DATA, ASN1_VALUE,
3825 ASN1_STRING, CONF_VALUE.
3828 *) Add a new SSL_MODE_RELEASE_BUFFERS mode flag to release unused buffer
3829 RAM on SSL connections. This option can save about 34k per idle SSL.
3832 *) Revamp of LHASH to provide stronger type-checking. Still to come:
3833 STACK, TXT_DB, bsearch, qsort.
3836 *) Initial support for Cryptographic Message Syntax (aka CMS) based
3837 on RFC3850, RFC3851 and RFC3852. New cms directory and cms utility,
3838 support for data, signedData, compressedData, digestedData and
3839 encryptedData, envelopedData types included. Scripts to check against
3840 RFC4134 examples draft and interop and consistency checks of many
3841 content types and variants.
3844 *) Add options to enc utility to support use of zlib compression BIO.
3847 *) Extend mk1mf to support importing of options and assembly language
3848 files from Configure script, currently only included in VC-WIN32.
3849 The assembly language rules can now optionally generate the source
3850 files from the associated perl scripts.
3853 *) Implement remaining functionality needed to support GOST ciphersuites.
3854 Interop testing has been performed using CryptoPro implementations.
3855 [Victor B. Wagner <vitus@cryptocom.ru>]
3857 *) s390x assembler pack.
3860 *) ARMv4 assembler pack. ARMv4 refers to v4 and later ISA, not CPU
3864 *) Implement Opaque PRF Input TLS extension as specified in
3865 draft-rescorla-tls-opaque-prf-input-00.txt. Since this is not an
3866 official specification yet and no extension type assignment by
3867 IANA exists, this extension (for now) will have to be explicitly
3868 enabled when building OpenSSL by providing the extension number
3869 to use. For example, specify an option
3871 -DTLSEXT_TYPE_opaque_prf_input=0x9527
3873 to the "config" or "Configure" script to enable the extension,
3874 assuming extension number 0x9527 (which is a completely arbitrary
3875 and unofficial assignment based on the MD5 hash of the Internet
3876 Draft). Note that by doing so, you potentially lose
3877 interoperability with other TLS implementations since these might
3878 be using the same extension number for other purposes.
3880 SSL_set_tlsext_opaque_prf_input(ssl, src, len) is used to set the
3881 opaque PRF input value to use in the handshake. This will create
3882 an internal copy of the length-'len' string at 'src', and will
3883 return non-zero for success.
3885 To get more control and flexibility, provide a callback function
3888 SSL_CTX_set_tlsext_opaque_prf_input_callback(ctx, cb)
3889 SSL_CTX_set_tlsext_opaque_prf_input_callback_arg(ctx, arg)
3893 int (*cb)(SSL *, void *peerinput, size_t len, void *arg);
3896 Callback function 'cb' will be called in handshakes, and is
3897 expected to use SSL_set_tlsext_opaque_prf_input() as appropriate.
3898 Argument 'arg' is for application purposes (the value as given to
3899 SSL_CTX_set_tlsext_opaque_prf_input_callback_arg() will directly
3900 be provided to the callback function). The callback function
3901 has to return non-zero to report success: usually 1 to use opaque
3902 PRF input just if possible, or 2 to enforce use of the opaque PRF
3903 input. In the latter case, the library will abort the handshake
3904 if opaque PRF input is not successfully negotiated.
3906 Arguments 'peerinput' and 'len' given to the callback function
3907 will always be NULL and 0 in the case of a client. A server will
3908 see the client's opaque PRF input through these variables if
3909 available (NULL and 0 otherwise). Note that if the server
3910 provides an opaque PRF input, the length must be the same as the
3911 length of the client's opaque PRF input.
3913 Note that the callback function will only be called when creating
3914 a new session (session resumption can resume whatever was
3915 previously negotiated), and will not be called in SSL 2.0
3916 handshakes; thus, SSL_CTX_set_options(ctx, SSL_OP_NO_SSLv2) or
3917 SSL_set_options(ssl, SSL_OP_NO_SSLv2) is especially recommended
3918 for applications that need to enforce opaque PRF input.
3922 *) Update ssl code to support digests other than SHA1+MD5 for handshake
3925 [Victor B. Wagner <vitus@cryptocom.ru>]
3927 *) Add RFC4507 support to OpenSSL. This includes the corrections in
3928 RFC4507bis. The encrypted ticket format is an encrypted encoded
3929 SSL_SESSION structure, that way new session features are automatically
3932 If a client application caches session in an SSL_SESSION structure
3933 support is transparent because tickets are now stored in the encoded
3936 The SSL_CTX structure automatically generates keys for ticket
3937 protection in servers so again support should be possible
3938 with no application modification.
3940 If a client or server wishes to disable RFC4507 support then the option
3941 SSL_OP_NO_TICKET can be set.
3943 Add a TLS extension debugging callback to allow the contents of any client
3944 or server extensions to be examined.
3946 This work was sponsored by Google.
3949 *) Final changes to avoid use of pointer pointer casts in OpenSSL.
3950 OpenSSL should now compile cleanly on gcc 4.2
3951 [Peter Hartley <pdh@utter.chaos.org.uk>, Steve Henson]
3953 *) Update SSL library to use new EVP_PKEY MAC API. Include generic MAC
3954 support including streaming MAC support: this is required for GOST
3955 ciphersuite support.
3956 [Victor B. Wagner <vitus@cryptocom.ru>, Steve Henson]
3958 *) Add option -stream to use PKCS#7 streaming in smime utility. New
3959 function i2d_PKCS7_bio_stream() and PEM_write_PKCS7_bio_stream()
3960 to output in BER and PEM format.
3963 *) Experimental support for use of HMAC via EVP_PKEY interface. This
3964 allows HMAC to be handled via the EVP_DigestSign*() interface. The
3965 EVP_PKEY "key" in this case is the HMAC key, potentially allowing
3966 ENGINE support for HMAC keys which are unextractable. New -mac and
3967 -macopt options to dgst utility.
3970 *) New option -sigopt to dgst utility. Update dgst to use
3971 EVP_Digest{Sign,Verify}*. These two changes make it possible to use
3972 alternative signing parameters such as X9.31 or PSS in the dgst
3976 *) Change ssl_cipher_apply_rule(), the internal function that does
3977 the work each time a ciphersuite string requests enabling
3978 ("foo+bar"), moving ("+foo+bar"), disabling ("-foo+bar", or
3979 removing ("!foo+bar") a class of ciphersuites: Now it maintains
3980 the order of disabled ciphersuites such that those ciphersuites
3981 that most recently went from enabled to disabled not only stay
3982 in order with respect to each other, but also have higher priority
3983 than other disabled ciphersuites the next time ciphersuites are
3986 This means that you can now say, e.g., "PSK:-PSK:HIGH" to enable
3987 the same ciphersuites as with "HIGH" alone, but in a specific
3988 order where the PSK ciphersuites come first (since they are the
3989 most recently disabled ciphersuites when "HIGH" is parsed).
3991 Also, change ssl_create_cipher_list() (using this new
3992 functionality) such that between otherwise identical
3993 ciphersuites, ephemeral ECDH is preferred over ephemeral DH in
3997 *) Change ssl_create_cipher_list() so that it automatically
3998 arranges the ciphersuites in reasonable order before starting
3999 to process the rule string. Thus, the definition for "DEFAULT"
4000 (SSL_DEFAULT_CIPHER_LIST) now is just "ALL:!aNULL:!eNULL", but
4001 remains equivalent to "AES:ALL:!aNULL:!eNULL:+aECDH:+kRSA:+RC4:@STRENGTH".
4002 This makes it much easier to arrive at a reasonable default order
4003 in applications for which anonymous ciphers are OK (meaning
4004 that you can't actually use DEFAULT).
4005 [Bodo Moeller; suggested by Victor Duchovni]
4007 *) Split the SSL/TLS algorithm mask (as used for ciphersuite string
4008 processing) into multiple integers instead of setting
4009 "SSL_MKEY_MASK" bits, "SSL_AUTH_MASK" bits, "SSL_ENC_MASK",
4010 "SSL_MAC_MASK", and "SSL_SSL_MASK" bits all in a single integer.
4011 (These masks as well as the individual bit definitions are hidden
4012 away into the non-exported interface ssl/ssl_locl.h, so this
4013 change to the definition of the SSL_CIPHER structure shouldn't
4014 affect applications.) This give us more bits for each of these
4015 categories, so there is no longer a need to coagulate AES128 and
4016 AES256 into a single algorithm bit, and to coagulate Camellia128
4017 and Camellia256 into a single algorithm bit, which has led to all
4020 Thus, among other things, the kludge introduced in 0.9.7m and
4021 0.9.8e for masking out AES256 independently of AES128 or masking
4022 out Camellia256 independently of AES256 is not needed here in 0.9.9.
4024 With the change, we also introduce new ciphersuite aliases that
4025 so far were missing: "AES128", "AES256", "CAMELLIA128", and
4029 *) Add support for dsa-with-SHA224 and dsa-with-SHA256.
4030 Use the leftmost N bytes of the signature input if the input is
4031 larger than the prime q (with N being the size in bytes of q).
4034 *) Very *very* experimental PKCS#7 streaming encoder support. Nothing uses
4035 it yet and it is largely untested.
4038 *) Add support for the ecdsa-with-SHA224/256/384/512 signature types.
4041 *) Initial incomplete changes to avoid need for function casts in OpenSSL
4042 some compilers (gcc 4.2 and later) reject their use. Safestack is
4043 reimplemented. Update ASN1 to avoid use of legacy functions.
4046 *) Win32/64 targets are linked with Winsock2.
4049 *) Add an X509_CRL_METHOD structure to allow CRL processing to be redirected
4050 to external functions. This can be used to increase CRL handling
4051 efficiency especially when CRLs are very large by (for example) storing
4052 the CRL revoked certificates in a database.
4055 *) Overhaul of by_dir code. Add support for dynamic loading of CRLs so
4056 new CRLs added to a directory can be used. New command line option
4057 -verify_return_error to s_client and s_server. This causes real errors
4058 to be returned by the verify callback instead of carrying on no matter
4059 what. This reflects the way a "real world" verify callback would behave.
4062 *) GOST engine, supporting several GOST algorithms and public key formats.
4063 Kindly donated by Cryptocom.
4066 *) Partial support for Issuing Distribution Point CRL extension. CRLs
4067 partitioned by DP are handled but no indirect CRL or reason partitioning
4068 (yet). Complete overhaul of CRL handling: now the most suitable CRL is
4069 selected via a scoring technique which handles IDP and AKID in CRLs.
4072 *) New X509_STORE_CTX callbacks lookup_crls() and lookup_certs() which
4073 will ultimately be used for all verify operations: this will remove the
4074 X509_STORE dependency on certificate verification and allow alternative
4075 lookup methods. X509_STORE based implementations of these two callbacks.
4078 *) Allow multiple CRLs to exist in an X509_STORE with matching issuer names.
4079 Modify get_crl() to find a valid (unexpired) CRL if possible.
4082 *) New function X509_CRL_match() to check if two CRLs are identical. Normally
4083 this would be called X509_CRL_cmp() but that name is already used by
4084 a function that just compares CRL issuer names. Cache several CRL
4085 extensions in X509_CRL structure and cache CRLDP in X509.
4088 *) Store a "canonical" representation of X509_NAME structure (ASN1 Name)
4089 this maps equivalent X509_NAME structures into a consistent structure.
4090 Name comparison can then be performed rapidly using memcmp().
4093 *) Non-blocking OCSP request processing. Add -timeout option to ocsp
4097 *) Allow digests to supply their own micalg string for S/MIME type using
4098 the ctrl EVP_MD_CTRL_MICALG.
4101 *) During PKCS7 signing pass the PKCS7 SignerInfo structure to the
4102 EVP_PKEY_METHOD before and after signing via the EVP_PKEY_CTRL_PKCS7_SIGN
4103 ctrl. It can then customise the structure before and/or after signing
4107 *) New function OBJ_add_sigid() to allow application defined signature OIDs
4108 to be added to OpenSSLs internal tables. New function OBJ_sigid_free()
4109 to free up any added signature OIDs.
4112 *) New functions EVP_CIPHER_do_all(), EVP_CIPHER_do_all_sorted(),
4113 EVP_MD_do_all() and EVP_MD_do_all_sorted() to enumerate internal
4114 digest and cipher tables. New options added to openssl utility:
4115 list-message-digest-algorithms and list-cipher-algorithms.
4118 *) Change the array representation of binary polynomials: the list
4119 of degrees of non-zero coefficients is now terminated with -1.
4120 Previously it was terminated with 0, which was also part of the
4121 value; thus, the array representation was not applicable to
4122 polynomials where t^0 has coefficient zero. This change makes
4123 the array representation useful in a more general context.
4126 *) Various modifications and fixes to SSL/TLS cipher string
4127 handling. For ECC, the code now distinguishes between fixed ECDH
4128 with RSA certificates on the one hand and with ECDSA certificates
4129 on the other hand, since these are separate ciphersuites. The
4130 unused code for Fortezza ciphersuites has been removed.
4132 For consistency with EDH, ephemeral ECDH is now called "EECDH"
4133 (not "ECDHE"). For consistency with the code for DH
4134 certificates, use of ECDH certificates is now considered ECDH
4135 authentication, not RSA or ECDSA authentication (the latter is
4136 merely the CA's signing algorithm and not actively used in the
4139 The temporary ciphersuite alias "ECCdraft" is no longer
4140 available, and ECC ciphersuites are no longer excluded from "ALL"
4141 and "DEFAULT". The following aliases now exist for RFC 4492
4142 ciphersuites, most of these by analogy with the DH case:
4144 kECDHr - ECDH cert, signed with RSA
4145 kECDHe - ECDH cert, signed with ECDSA
4146 kECDH - ECDH cert (signed with either RSA or ECDSA)
4147 kEECDH - ephemeral ECDH
4148 ECDH - ECDH cert or ephemeral ECDH
4154 AECDH - anonymous ECDH
4155 EECDH - non-anonymous ephemeral ECDH (equivalent to "kEECDH:-AECDH")
4159 *) Add additional S/MIME capabilities for AES and GOST ciphers if supported.
4160 Use correct micalg parameters depending on digest(s) in signed message.
4163 *) Add engine support for EVP_PKEY_ASN1_METHOD. Add functions to process
4164 an ENGINE asn1 method. Support ENGINE lookups in the ASN1 code.
4167 *) Initial engine support for EVP_PKEY_METHOD. New functions to permit
4168 an engine to register a method. Add ENGINE lookups for methods and
4169 functional reference processing.
4172 *) New functions EVP_Digest{Sign,Verify)*. These are enhanced versions of
4173 EVP_{Sign,Verify}* which allow an application to customise the signature
4177 *) New -resign option to smime utility. This adds one or more signers
4178 to an existing PKCS#7 signedData structure. Also -md option to use an
4179 alternative message digest algorithm for signing.
4182 *) Tidy up PKCS#7 routines and add new functions to make it easier to
4183 create PKCS7 structures containing multiple signers. Update smime
4184 application to support multiple signers.
4187 *) New -macalg option to pkcs12 utility to allow setting of an alternative
4191 *) Initial support for PKCS#5 v2.0 PRFs other than default SHA1 HMAC.
4192 Reorganize PBE internals to lookup from a static table using NIDs,
4193 add support for HMAC PBE OID translation. Add a EVP_CIPHER ctrl:
4194 EVP_CTRL_PBE_PRF_NID this allows a cipher to specify an alternative
4195 PRF which will be automatically used with PBES2.
4198 *) Replace the algorithm specific calls to generate keys in "req" with the
4202 *) Update PKCS#7 enveloped data routines to use new API. This is now
4203 supported by any public key method supporting the encrypt operation. A
4204 ctrl is added to allow the public key algorithm to examine or modify
4205 the PKCS#7 RecipientInfo structure if it needs to: for RSA this is
4209 *) Add a ctrl to asn1 method to allow a public key algorithm to express
4210 a default digest type to use. In most cases this will be SHA1 but some
4211 algorithms (such as GOST) need to specify an alternative digest. The
4212 return value indicates how strong the preference is 1 means optional and
4213 2 is mandatory (that is it is the only supported type). Modify
4214 ASN1_item_sign() to accept a NULL digest argument to indicate it should
4215 use the default md. Update openssl utilities to use the default digest
4216 type for signing if it is not explicitly indicated.
4219 *) Use OID cross reference table in ASN1_sign() and ASN1_verify(). New
4220 EVP_MD flag EVP_MD_FLAG_PKEY_METHOD_SIGNATURE. This uses the relevant
4221 signing method from the key type. This effectively removes the link
4222 between digests and public key types.
4225 *) Add an OID cross reference table and utility functions. Its purpose is to
4226 translate between signature OIDs such as SHA1WithrsaEncryption and SHA1,
4227 rsaEncryption. This will allow some of the algorithm specific hackery
4228 needed to use the correct OID to be removed.
4231 *) Remove algorithm specific dependencies when setting PKCS7_SIGNER_INFO
4232 structures for PKCS7_sign(). They are now set up by the relevant public
4236 *) Add provisional EC pkey method with support for ECDSA and ECDH.
4239 *) Add support for key derivation (agreement) in the API, DH method and
4243 *) Add DSA pkey method and DH pkey methods, extend DH ASN1 method to support
4244 public and private key formats. As a side effect these add additional
4245 command line functionality not previously available: DSA signatures can be
4246 generated and verified using pkeyutl and DH key support and generation in
4251 [Oliver Tappe <zooey@hirschkaefer.de>]
4253 *) New make target "install_html_docs" installs HTML renditions of the
4255 [Oliver Tappe <zooey@hirschkaefer.de>]
4257 *) New utility "genpkey" this is analogous to "genrsa" etc except it can
4258 generate keys for any algorithm. Extend and update EVP_PKEY_METHOD to
4259 support key and parameter generation and add initial key generation
4260 functionality for RSA.
4263 *) Add functions for main EVP_PKEY_method operations. The undocumented
4264 functions EVP_PKEY_{encrypt,decrypt} have been renamed to
4265 EVP_PKEY_{encrypt,decrypt}_old.
4268 *) Initial definitions for EVP_PKEY_METHOD. This will be a high level public
4269 key API, doesn't do much yet.
4272 *) New function EVP_PKEY_asn1_get0_info() to retrieve information about
4273 public key algorithms. New option to openssl utility:
4274 "list-public-key-algorithms" to print out info.
4277 *) Implement the Supported Elliptic Curves Extension for
4278 ECC ciphersuites from draft-ietf-tls-ecc-12.txt.
4281 *) Don't free up OIDs in OBJ_cleanup() if they are in use by EVP_MD or
4282 EVP_CIPHER structures to avoid later problems in EVP_cleanup().