| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files |
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Not a good idea to use a world-writable directory, see ssh_config(5)…
Note that variable expansion is only available in OpenSSH 8.4 and later,
cf. https://bugzilla.mindrot.org/show_bug.cgi?id=3140 .
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This is shorter and more future-proof. Quoting the manual:
restrict
Enable all restrictions, i.e. disable port, agent and X11
forwarding, as well as disabling PTY allocation and execution of
~/.ssh/rc. If any future restriction capabilities are added to
authorized_keys files they will be included in this set.
Note that this won't work with Jessie's OpenSSH server.
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Also, make use the tag doesn't exist, and fail early if we can't detect
the version.
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Using the libssl interface simplifies our protocol black/whitelist
greatly; this only allows simple min/max bounds, but holes are arguably
not very useful here.
Using the new settings bumps the required libssl version to 1.1.0.
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So we can test TLSv1 as well, not just TLSv1.2 and later.
Also, explicitly set ssl_min_protocol=TLSv1 in the Dovecot configuration
file (the default as of 2.3.11.3), hence running TLS tests now require
Dovecot 2.3 or later.
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This avoids maintaing our own map.
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Namely, use the system default instead of "!SSLv2 !SSLv3 !TLSv1 !TLSv1.1".
As of Debian Buster (OpenSSL 1.1.1) this does not make a difference,
however using the system default provides better compatibility with
future libssl versions.
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The test suite already required OpenSSL ≥1.1.1 as some tests are using
TLSv1.3.
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Also, change the tag format from upstream/$VERSION to v$VERSION.
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This is controlled by the new 'SSL_hostname' option. The default value
of that option is the value of the 'host' option when it is hostname,
and the empty string (which disables SNI) when it is an IP literal.
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More precisely, ensure that the certificate Subject Alternative Name
(SAN) or Subject CommonName (CN) matches the hostname or IP literal
specified by the 'host' option. Previously it was only verifying the
chain of trust.
This bumps the minimum Net::SSLeay version to 1.83 and OpenSSL version
1.0.2.
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Also, document that enclosing 'host' value in square brackets forces its
interpretation as an IP literal (hence skips name resolution).
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In addition, sign test certificates with the same root CA. Hence
running `make test` now requires OpenSSL 1.1.1 or later.
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This requires dovecot-imapd 2.2.31 or later.
Certificate generated with:
$ openssl genpkey -algorithm EC -pkeyopt ec_paramgen_curve:P-256 -pkeyopt ec_param_enc:named_curve \
-out tests/snippets/dovecot/dovecot.ecdsa.key
$ openssl req -x509 -days 3650 -subj "/CN=InterIMAP test suite" \
-key tests/snippets/dovecot/dovecot.ecdsa.key \
-out tests/snippets/dovecot/dovecot.ecdsa.crt
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to pin.
And succeeds if, and only if, the peer certificate SPKI matches one of
the pinned digest values. Specifying multiple digest values can key
useful in key rollover scenarios and/or when the server supports
certificates of different types (for instance RSA+ECDSA).
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It's arguably the most common use-case. Generated with
$ openssl genpkey -algorithm RSA -out tests/snippets/dovecot/dovecot.rsa.key
$ openssl req -x509 -days 3650 -subj "/CN=InterIMAP test suite" \
-key tests/snippets/dovecot/dovecot.rsa.key \
-out tests/snippets/dovecot/dovecot.rsa.crt
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The standard error is never sent to /dev/null in debug mode.
Closes: deb#968392
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Set "STARTTLS = NO" to ignore. This is similar to CVE-2020-12398 and
CVE-2020-14093.
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For background see https://gitlab.com/muttmua/mutt/-/issues/248 .
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