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// Copyright (c) 2015, the Dart project authors. Please see the AUTHORS file
// for details. All rights reserved. Use of this source code is governed by a
// BSD-style license that can be found in the LICENSE file.
part of dart.io;
/**
* The object containing the certificates to trust when making
* a secure client connection, and the certificate chain and
* private key to serve from a secure server.
*
* The [SecureSocket] and [SecureServer] classes take a SecurityContext
* as an argument to their connect and bind methods.
*
* Certificates and keys can be added to a SecurityContext from either PEM
* or PKCS12 containers.
*
* iOS note: Some methods to add, remove, and inspect certificates are not yet
* implemented. However, the platform's built-in trusted certificates can
* be used, by way of [SecurityContext.defaultContext].
*/
abstract class SecurityContext {
external factory SecurityContext();
/**
* Secure networking classes with an optional `context` parameter
* use the [defaultContext] object if the parameter is omitted.
* This object can also be accessed, and modified, directly.
* Each isolate has a different [defaultContext] object.
* The [defaultContext] object uses a list of well-known trusted
* certificate authorities as its trusted roots. On Linux and Windows, this
* list is taken from Mozilla, who maintains it as part of Firefox. On,
* MacOS, iOS, and Android, this list comes from the trusted certificates
* stores built in to the platforms.
*/
external static SecurityContext get defaultContext;
/**
* Sets the private key for a server certificate or client certificate.
*
* A secure connection using this SecurityContext will use this key with
* the server or client certificate to sign and decrypt messages.
* [file] is the path to a PEM or PKCS12 file containing an encrypted
* private key, encrypted with [password]. Assuming it is well-formatted, all
* other contents of [file] are ignored. An unencrypted file can be used,
* but this is not usual.
*
* NB: This function calls [ReadFileAsBytesSync], and will block on file IO.
* Prefer using [usePrivateKeyBytes].
*
* iOS note: Only PKCS12 data is supported. It should contain both the private
* key and the certificate chain. On iOS one call to [usePrivateKey] with this
* data is used instead of two calls to [useCertificateChain] and
* [usePrivateKey].
*/
void usePrivateKey(String file, {String password});
/**
* Sets the private key for a server certificate or client certificate.
*
* Like [usePrivateKey], but takes the contents of the file as a list
* of bytes.
*/
void usePrivateKeyBytes(List<int> keyBytes, {String password});
/**
* Sets the set of trusted X509 certificates used by [SecureSocket]
* client connections, when connecting to a secure server.
*
* [file] is the path to a PEM or PKCS12 file containing X509 certificates,
* usually root certificates from certificate authorities. For PKCS12 files,
* [password] is the password for the file. For PEM files, [password] is
* ignored. Assuming it is well-formatted, all other contents of [file] are
* ignored.
*
* NB: This function calls [ReadFileAsBytesSync], and will block on file IO.
* Prefer using [setTrustedCertificatesBytes].
*
* iOS note: On iOS, this call takes only the bytes for a single DER
* encoded X509 certificate. It may be called multiple times to add
* multiple trusted certificates to the context. A DER encoded certificate
* can be obtained from a PEM encoded certificate by using the openssl tool:
*
* $ openssl x509 -outform der -in cert.pem -out cert.der
*/
void setTrustedCertificates(String file, {String password});
/**
* Sets the set of trusted X509 certificates used by [SecureSocket]
* client connections, when connecting to a secure server.
*
* Like [setTrustedCertificates] but takes the contents of the file.
*/
void setTrustedCertificatesBytes(List<int> certBytes, {String password});
/**
* Sets the chain of X509 certificates served by [SecureServer]
* when making secure connections, including the server certificate.
*
* [file] is a PEM or PKCS12 file containing X509 certificates, starting with
* the root authority and intermediate authorities forming the signed
* chain to the server certificate, and ending with the server certificate.
* The private key for the server certificate is set by [usePrivateKey]. For
* PKCS12 files, [password] is the password for the file. For PEM files,
* [password] is ignored. Assuming it is well-formatted, all
* other contents of [file] are ignored.
*
* NB: This function calls [ReadFileAsBytesSync], and will block on file IO.
* Prefer using [useCertificateChainBytes].
*
* iOS note: As noted above, [usePrivateKey] does the job of both
* that call and this one. On iOS, this call is a no-op.
*/
void useCertificateChain(String file, {String password});
/**
* Sets the chain of X509 certificates served by [SecureServer]
* when making secure connections, including the server certificate.
*
* Like [useCertificateChain] but takes the contents of the file.
*/
void useCertificateChainBytes(List<int> chainBytes, {String password});
/**
* Sets the list of authority names that a [SecureServer] will advertise
* as accepted when requesting a client certificate from a connecting
* client.
*
* [file] is a PEM or PKCS12 file containing the accepted signing
* authority certificates - the authority names are extracted from the
* certificates. For PKCS12 files, [password] is the password for the file.
* For PEM files, [password] is ignored. Assuming it is well-formatted, all
* other contents of [file] are ignored.
*
* NB: This function calls [ReadFileAsBytesSync], and will block on file IO.
* Prefer using [setClientAuthoritiesBytes].
*
* iOS note: This call is not supported.
*/
void setClientAuthorities(String file, {String password});
/**
* Sets the list of authority names that a [SecureServer] will advertise
* as accepted, when requesting a client certificate from a connecting
* client.
*
* Like [setClientAuthority] but takes the contents of the file.
*/
void setClientAuthoritiesBytes(List<int> authCertBytes, {String password});
/**
* Whether the platform supports ALPN.
*/
external static bool get alpnSupported;
/**
* Sets the list of application-level protocols supported by a client
* connection or server connection. The ALPN (application level protocol
* negotiation) extension to TLS allows a client to send a list of
* protocols in the TLS client hello message, and the server to pick
* one and send the selected one back in its server hello message.
*
* Separate lists of protocols can be sent for client connections and
* for server connections, using the same SecurityContext. The [isServer]
* boolean argument specifies whether to set the list for server connections
* or client connections.
*/
void setAlpnProtocols(List<String> protocols, bool isServer);
/// Encodes a set of supported protocols for ALPN/NPN usage.
///
/// The `protocols` list is expected to contain protocols in descending order
/// of preference.
///
/// See RFC 7301 (https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc7301) for the encoding of
/// `List<String> protocols`:
/// opaque ProtocolName<1..2^8-1>;
///
/// struct {
/// ProtocolName protocol_name_list<2..2^16-1>
/// } ProtocolNameList;
///
/// The encoding of the opaque `ProtocolName<lower..upper>` vector is
/// described in RFC 2246: 4.3 Vectors.
///
/// Note: Even though this encoding scheme would allow a total
/// `ProtocolNameList` length of 65535, this limit cannot be reached. Testing
/// showed that more than ~ 2^14 bytes will fail to negotiate a protocol.
/// We will be conservative and support only messages up to (1<<13)-1 bytes.
static Uint8List _protocolsToLengthEncoding(List<String> protocols) {
if (protocols == null || protocols.length == 0) {
return new Uint8List(0);
}
int protocolsLength = protocols.length;
// Calculate the number of bytes we will need if it is ASCII.
int expectedLength = protocolsLength;
for (int i = 0; i < protocolsLength; i++) {
int length = protocols[i].length;
if (length > 0 && length <= 255) {
expectedLength += length;
} else {
throw new ArgumentError(
'Length of protocol must be between 1 and 255 (was: $length).');
}
}
if (expectedLength >= (1 << 13)) {
throw new ArgumentError(
'The maximum message length supported is 2^13-1.');
}
// Try encoding the `List<String> protocols` array using fast ASCII path.
var bytes = new Uint8List(expectedLength);
int bytesOffset = 0;
for (int i = 0; i < protocolsLength; i++) {
String proto = protocols[i];
// Add length byte.
bytes[bytesOffset++] = proto.length;
int bits = 0;
// Add protocol bytes.
for (int j = 0; j < proto.length; j++) {
var char = proto.codeUnitAt(j);
bits |= char;
bytes[bytesOffset++] = char & 0xff;
}
// Go slow case if we have encountered anything non-ascii.
if (bits > 0x7f) {
return _protocolsToLengthEncodingNonAsciiBailout(protocols);
}
}
return bytes;
}
static Uint8List _protocolsToLengthEncodingNonAsciiBailout(
List<String> protocols) {
void addProtocol(List<int> outBytes, String protocol) {
var protocolBytes = UTF8.encode(protocol);
var len = protocolBytes.length;
if (len > 255) {
throw new ArgumentError(
'Length of protocol must be between 1 and 255 (was: $len)');
}
// Add length byte.
outBytes.add(len);
// Add protocol bytes.
outBytes.addAll(protocolBytes);
}
List<int> bytes = [];
for (var i = 0; i < protocols.length; i++) {
addProtocol(bytes, protocols[i]);
}
if (bytes.length >= (1 << 13)) {
throw new ArgumentError(
'The maximum message length supported is 2^13-1.');
}
return new Uint8List.fromList(bytes);
}
}