This work moves all TLS / crypto related code into a tls_openssl.c
file and adds a tls_none.c which contains just stubs.
Allows compilation of Kore with TLS_BACKEND=none to remove building
against OpenSSL.
Also adds code for SHA1/SHA2 taken from openssh-portable so we don't
depend on those being present anymore in libcrypto.
Starting with the privsep config, this commit changes the following:
- Removes the root, runas, keymgr_root, keymgr_runas, acme_root and
acme_runas configuration options.
Instead these are now configured via a privsep configuration context:
privsep worker {
root /tmp
runas nobody
}
This is also configurable via Python using the new kore.privsep() method:
kore.privsep("worker", root="/tmp", runas="nobody", skip=["chroot"])
Tied into this we also better handle worker startup:
- Per worker process, wait until it signalled it is ready.
- If a worker fails at startup, display its last log lines more clearly.
- Don't start acme process if no domain requires acme.
- Remove each process its individual startup log message in favour
of a generalized one that displays its PID, root and user.
- At startup, log the kore version and built-ins in a nicer way.
- The worker processes now check things they need to start running
before signaling they are ready (such as access to CA certs for
TLS client authentication).
- Make sure tls-alpn01 works even if the underlying SSL library ends up
calling the ALPN callback *before* the SNI extension was parsed and
the correct domain was selected.
LibreSSL still does this, and older OpenSSL did too I believe, however
OpenSSL grew a clue and always makes sure SNI is called first.
Yes, TLS extensions have no fixed order but it still makes sense to
notify applications using your library of the SNI extension first
before anything else almost.
Oh well.
A new acme process is created that communicates with the acme servers.
This process does not hold any of your private keys (no account keys,
no domain keys etc).
Whenever the acme process requires a signed payload it will ask the keymgr
process to do the signing with the relevant keys.
This process is also sandboxed with pledge+unveil on OpenBSD and seccomp
syscall filtering on Linux.
The implementation only supports the tls-alpn-01 challenge. This means that
you do not need to open additional ports on your machine.
http-01 and dns-01 are currently not supported (no wildcard support).
A new configuration option "acme_provider" is available and can be set
to the acme server its directory. By default this will point to the
live letsencrypt environment:
https://acme-v02.api.letsencrypt.org/directory
The acme process can be controlled via the following config options:
- acme_root (where the acme process will chroot/chdir into).
- acme_runas (the user the acme process will run as).
If none are set, the values from 'root' and 'runas' are taken.
If you want to turn on acme for domains you do it as follows:
domain kore.io {
acme yes
}
You do not need to specify certkey/certfile anymore, if they are present
still
they will be overwritten by the acme system.
The keymgr will store all certificates and keys under its root
(keymgr_root), the account key is stored as "/account-key.pem" and all
obtained certificates go under "certificates/<domain>/fullchain.pem" while
keys go under "certificates/<domain>/key.pem".
Kore will automatically renew certificates if they will expire in 7 days
or less.