Motivation:
junit deprecated Assert.assertThat(...)
Modifications:
Use MatcherAssert.assertThat(...) as replacement for deprecated method
Result:
Less deprecation warnings
Motivation:
We can filter out `null` rules while initializing the instance of `RuleBasedIpFilter` so we don't have to keep checking for `null` rules while iterating through `rules` array in `for loop` which is just a waste of CPU cycles.
Modification:
Added `null` rule check inside the constructor.
Result:
No more wasting CPU cycles on check the `null` rule each time in `for loop` and makes the overall operation more faster.
Motivation:
LGTM reports multiple issues. They need to be triaged,
and real ones should be fixed.
Modifications:
- Fixed multiple issues reported by LGTM, such as redundant conditions,
resource leaks, typos, possible integer overflows.
- Suppressed false-positives.
- Added a few testcases.
Result:
Fixed several possible issues, get rid of false alarms in the LGTM report.
Motivation:
Users may want to do special actions when onComplete(...) was called and depend on these once they receive the SniCompletionEvent
Modifications:
Switch order and so call onLookupComplete(...) before we fire the event
Result:
Fixes https://github.com/netty/netty/issues/10655
Motivation:
Java 16 will come around eventually anyway, and this makes it easier for people to experiment with Early Access builds.
Modification:
- Added Maven profiles for JDK 16 to relevant pom files.
- Removed the `--add-exports java.base/sun.security.x509=ALL-UNNAMED` argument when running tests; we've not needed it since the Java11-as-baseline PR landed.
Result:
Netty now builds on JDK 16 pre-releases (provided they've not broken compatibility in some way).
Raise the Netty 5 minimum required Java version to Java 11.
Motivation:
Java 11 has been out for some time, and Netty 5 is still some ways out.
There are also many good features in Java 11 that we wish to use, such as VarHandles, var-keyword, and the module system.
There is no reason for Netty 5 to not require Java 11, since Netty 4.x will still be supported for the time being.
Modification:
Remove everything in the pom files related to Java versions older than Java 11.
Remove the animal-sniffer plug-in and rely on the `--release` compiler flag instead.
Remove docker files related to Java versions older than Java 11.
Remove the copied SCTP APIs -- we should test this commit independently on Windows.
Remove the OpenJdkSelfSignedCertGenerator.java file and just always use Bouncy Castle for generating self-signed certificates for testing.
Make netty-testsuite tests pass by including Bouncy Castle as a test dependency, so we're able to generate our self-signed certificate.
Result:
Java 11 is now the minimum required Java version.
Motivation:
We should implement the Closeable method to properly close `OutputStream` and `PcapWriteHandler`. So whenever `handlerRemoved(ChannelHandlerContext)` is called or the user wants to stop the Pcap writes into `OutputStream`, we have a proper method to close it otherwise writing data to close `OutputStream` will result in `IOException`.
Modification:
Implemented `Closeable` in `PcapWriteHandler` which calls `PcapWriter#close` and closes `OutputStream` and stops Pcap writes.
Result:
Better handling of Pcap writes.
Motivation:
We wish to use Unsafe as little as possible, and Java 8 allows us
to take some short-cuts or play some tricks with generics,
for the purpose of working around having to declare all checked
exceptions. Ideally all checked exceptions would be declared, but
the code base is not ready for that yet.
Modification:
The call to UNSAFE.throwException has been removed, so when we need
that feature, we instead use the generic exception trick.
In may cases, Java 8 allows us to throw Throwable directly. This
happens in cases where no exception is declared to be thrown in a
scope.
Finally, some warnings have also been fixed, and some imports have
been reorganised and cleaned up while I was modifying the files
anyway.
Result:
We no longer use Unsafe for throwing any exceptions.
Motivation:
We need to take the Provider into account as well when trying to detect if TLSv1.3 is used by default / supported
Modifications:
- Change utility method to respect provider as well
- Change testcode
Result:
Less error-prone tests
Motivation:
Some JDKs dissallow the usage of keysizes < 2048, so we should not use such small keysizes in tests.
This showed up on fedora 32:
```
Caused by: java.security.cert.CertPathValidatorException: Algorithm constraints check failed on keysize limits. RSA 1024bit key used with certificate: CN=tlsclient. Usage was tls client
at sun.security.util.DisabledAlgorithmConstraints$KeySizeConstraint.permits(DisabledAlgorithmConstraints.java:817)
at sun.security.util.DisabledAlgorithmConstraints$Constraints.permits(DisabledAlgorithmConstraints.java:419)
at sun.security.util.DisabledAlgorithmConstraints.permits(DisabledAlgorithmConstraints.java:167)
at sun.security.provider.certpath.AlgorithmChecker.check(AlgorithmChecker.java:326)
at sun.security.provider.certpath.PKIXMasterCertPathValidator.validate(PKIXMasterCertPathValidator.java:125)
... 23 more
```
Modifications:
Replace hardcoded keys / certs with SelfSignedCertificate
Result:
No test-failures related to small key sizes anymore.
Motivation:
We should stop as soon as we were able to set the key material on the server side as otherwise we may select keymaterial that "belongs" to a less prefered cipher. Beside this it also is just useless work.
We also need to propagate the exception when it happens during key material selection on the client side so openssl will produce the right alert.
Modifications:
- Stop once we were able to select a key material on the server side
- Ensure we not call choose*Alias more often then needed
- Propagate exceptions during selection of the keymaterial on the client side.
Result:
Less overhead and more correct behaviour
Motivation:
We need to let openssl know that we failed to find the key material so it will produce an alert for the remote peer to consume. Beside this we also need to ensure we wrap(...) until we produced everything as otherwise the remote peer may see partial data when an alert is produced in multiple steps.
Modifications:
- Correctly throw if we could not find the keymaterial
- wrap until we produced everything
- Add test
Result:
Correctly handle the case when key material could not be found
Motivation:
Calling chooseServerAlias(...) may be expensive so we should ensure we not call it multiple times for the same auth methods.
Modifications:
Remove duplicated from authMethods before trying to call chooseServerAlias(...)
Result:
Less performance overhead during key material selection
Motivation:
Following Javadoc standard
Modification:
Change from `@param KeyManager` to `@param keyManager`
Result:
The `@param` matches the actual parameter variable name
Motivation:
Write TCP and UDP packets into Pcap `OutputStream` which helps a lot in debugging.
Modification:
Added TCP and UDP Pcap writer.
Result:
New handler can write packets into an `OutputStream`, e.g. a file that can be opened with Wireshark.
Fixes#10385.
Motivation:
This reverts commit 7bf1ffb2d4 as it turns out it introduced a big performance regression.
Modifications:
Revert 7bf1ffb2d4
Result:
Performance of TLS is back to normal
Motivation:
`IpSubnetFilter` uses Binary Search for IP Address search which is fast if we have large set of IP addresses to filter.
Modification:
Added `IpSubnetFilter` which takes `IpSubnetFilterRule` for filtering.
Result:
Faster IP address filter.
Motivation:
`RuleBasedIpFilter` had JavaDoc `{@link #channelRejected(ChannelHandlerContext, SocketAddress)}` instead of `{@link AbstractRemoteAddressFilter#channelRejected(ChannelHandlerContext, SocketAddress)}`.
Modification:
Added `AbstractRemoteAddressFilter` reference.
Result:
Fixed JavaDoc error and made documentation more clear.
Motivation:
Right now after a SslMasterKeyHandler is added to the pipeline,
it also needs to be enabled via a system property explicitly. In
some environments where the handler is conditionally added to
the pipeline this is redundant and a bit confusing.
Modifications:
This changeset keeps the default behavior, but allows child
implementations to tweak the way on how it detects that it
should actually handle the event when it is being raised.
Also, removed a private static that is not used in the wireshark
handler.
Result:
Child implementations can be more flexible in deciding when
and how the handler should perform its work (without changing
any of the defaults).
Motivation:
To reduce latency and RTTs we should use TLS False Start when jdkCompatibilityMode is not required and its supported
Modifications:
Use SSL_MODE_ENABLE_FALSE_START when jdkCompatibilityMode is false
Result:
Less RTTs and so lower latency when TLS False Start is supported
Motivation:
How we init our static fields in Conscrypt was kind of error-prone and may even lead to NPE later on when methods were invoked out of order.
Modifications:
- Move all the init code to a static block
- Remove static field which is not needed anymore
Result:
Cleanup and also fixes https://github.com/netty/netty/issues/10413
Motivation:
fd0d06e introduced the usage of MethodHandles and so also introduced some usages of invokeExact(...). Unfortunally when calling this method we missed to also cast the return value in the static init block of JdkAlpnSslUtils which lead to an exception to be thrown as the JVM did assume the return value is void which is not true.
Modifications:
Correctly cast the return value of invokeExact(...)
Result:
ALPN can be used in master with JDK again
Motiviation:
When TLSv1.3 was introduced almost 2 years ago, it was decided to disable it by default, even when it's supported by the underlying TLS implementation.
TLSv13 is pretty stable now in Java (out of the box in Java 11, OpenJSSE for Java 8, BoringSSL and OpenSSL) and may be enabled by default.
Modifications:
Ensure TLSv13 is enabled by default when the underyling JDK SSLEngine implementation enables it as well
Result:
TLSv1.3 is now enabled by default, so users don't have to explicitly enable it.
Co-authored-by: Stephane Landelle <slandelle@gatling.io>
Motivation:
AlgorithmId.sha256WithRSAEncryption_oid was removed in JDK15 and later so we should not depend on it as otherwise we will see compilation errors
Modifications:
Replace AlgorithmId.sha256WithRSAEncryption_oid usage with specify the OID directly
Result:
Compiles on JDK15+
Motivation:
Replace Class.getClassLoader with io.netty.util.internal.PlatformDependent.getClassLoader in Openssl so it also works when a SecurityManager is in place
Modification:
Replace Class.getClassLoader with io.netty.util.internal.PlatformDependent.getClassLoader in Openssl
Result:
No issues when a SecurityManager is in place
Motivation:
TLSv1.3 is not strictly limited to Java11+ anymore as different vendors backported TLSv1.3 to Java8 as well. We should ensure we make the detection of if TLSv1.3 is supported not depend on the Java version that is used.
Modifications:
- Add SslProvider.isTlsv13Supported(...) and use it in tests to detect if we should run tests against TLSv1.3 as well
- Adjust testcase to work on latest JDK 8 release as well
Result:
Correct detection of TLSv1.3 support even if Java version < 11.
Motivation:
At the moment we don't support session caching for client side when using native SSLEngine implementation and our implementation of SSLSessionContext is incomplete.
Modification:
- Consume netty-tcnative changes to be able to cache session in an external cache
- Add and adjust unit tests to test session caching
- Add an in memory session cache that is hooked into native SSLEngine
Result:
Support session caching on the client and server side
Motivation:
jdk.tls.client.enableSessionTicketExtension property must be respect by OPENSSL and OPENSSL_REFCNT SslProvider to ensure a consistent behavior. Due a bug this was not the case and it only worked for OPENSSL_REFCNT but not for OPENSSL.
Modifications:
Move the property check into static method that is used by both
Result:
Correctly respect jdk.tls.client.enableSessionTicketExtension
Motivation:
At the moment we may report BUFFER_OVERFLOW when wrap(...) fails to consume data but still prodce some. This is not correct and we should better report NEED_WRAP as we already have produced some data (for example tickets). This way the user will try again without increasing the buffer size which is more correct and may reduce the number of allocations
Modifications:
Return NEED_WRAP when we produced some data but not consumed any.
Result:
Fix ReferenceCountedOpenSslEngine.wrap(...) state machine
**Motivation:**
We are interested in building Netty libraries with Ahead-of-time compilation with GraalVM. We saw there was [prior work done on this](https://github.com/netty/netty/search?q=graalvm&unscoped_q=graalvm). We want to introduce a change which will unblock GraalVM support for applications using netty and `netty-tcnative`.
This solves the error [that some others encounter](https://github.com/oracle/graal/search?q=UnsatisfiedLinkError+sslOpCipherServerPreference&type=Issues):
```
Exception in thread "main" java.lang.UnsatisfiedLinkError: io.grpc.netty.shaded.io.netty.internal.tcnative.NativeStaticallyReferencedJniMethods.sslOpCipherServerPreference()I [symbol: Java_io_grpc_netty_shaded_io_netty_internal_tcnative_NativeStaticallyReferencedJniMethods_sslOpCipherServerPreference or Java_io_grpc_netty_shaded_io_netty_internal_tcnative_NativeStaticallyReferencedJniMethods_sslOpCipherServerPreference__]
```
**Modification:**
The root cause of the issue is that in the tcnative libraries, the [`SSL.java` class](783a8b6b69/openssl-dynamic/src/main/java/io/netty/internal/tcnative/SSL.java (L67)) references a native call in the static initialization of the class - the method `sslOpCipherServerPreference()` on line 67 is used to initialize the static variable. But you see that `OpenSsl` also uses[ `SSL.class` to check if `netty-tcnative` is on the classpath before loading the native library](cbe238a95b/handler/src/main/java/io/netty/handler/ssl/OpenSsl.java (L123)).
So this is the problem because in ahead-of-time compilation, when it references the SSL class, it will try to load those static initializers and make the native library call, but it cannot do so because the native library has not been loaded yet since the `SSL` class is being referenced to check if the library should be loaded in the first place.
**Solution:** So the proposed solution here is to just choose a different class in the `tcnative` package which does not make a native library call during static initialization. I just chose `SSLContext` if this is OK.
This should have no negative effects other than unblocking the GraalVM use-case.
**Result:**
It fixes the unsatisfied link error. It will fix error for future users; it is a common error people encounter.
Motivation:
There was a new netty-tcnative release which we should use. Beside this the SSLErrorTest was quite fragile and so should be adjusted.
Modifications:
Update netty-tcnative and adjust test
Result:
Use latest netty-tcnative release
Motivation:
BoringSSL behaves differently then OpenSSL and not include any TLS1.3 ciphers in the returned array when calling SSL_get_ciphers(...). This is due the fact that it also not allow to explicit configure which are supported and which not for TLS1.3. To mimic the behaviour expected by the SSLEngine API we should workaround this.
Modifications:
- Add a unit test that verifies enabled protocols / ciphers
- Add special handling for BoringSSL and tls1.3
Result:
Make behaviour consistent
Motivation:
We did not correctly preserve the original cause of the SSLException when all the following are true:
* SSL_read failed
* handshake was finished
* some outbound data was produced durigin SSL_read (for example ssl alert) that needs to be picked up by wrap(...)
Modifications:
Ensure we correctly preserve the original cause of the SSLException and rethrow it once we produced all data via wrap(...)
Result:
Be able to understand why we see an error in all cases
Motivation:
Due a bug in our test we may dropped data on the floor which are generated during handshaking (or slightly after). This could lead to corrupt state in the engine itself and so fail tests. This is especially true for TLS1.3 which generates the sessions on the server after the "actual handshake" is done.
Modifications:
Contine with wrap / unwrap until all data was consumed
Result:
Correctly feed all data to the engine during testing
Motivation:
When ApplicationProtocolNegotiationHandler is in the pipeline we should expect that its handshakeFailure(...) method will be able to completly handle the handshake error. At the moment this is not the case as it only handled SslHandshakeCompletionEvent but not the exceptionCaught(...) that is also triggered in this case
Modifications:
- Call handshakeFailure(...) in exceptionCaught and so fix double notification.
- Add testcases
Result:
Fixes https://github.com/netty/netty/issues/10342
Motivation:
I did not correctly adjust the code before cherry-pick, causing a compilation error in the test
Modifications:
Use ChannelHandler
Result:
No more compilation error
The current FLowControlHandler keeps a flag to track whether a read() call is pending.
This could lead to a scenario where you call read multiple times when the queue is empty,
and when the FlowControlHandler Queue starts getting messages, channelRead will be fired only once,
when we should've fired x many times, once for each time the handlers downstream called read().
Modifications:
Minor change to replace the boolean flag with a counter and adding a unit test for this scenario.
Result:
I used TDD, so I wrote the test, made sure it's failing, then updated the code and re-ran the test
to make sure it's successful after the changes.
Co-authored-by: Kareem Ali <kali@localhost.localdomain>
Motivation:
9b7e091 added a special SSLHandshakeException sub-class to signal handshake timeouts but we missed to update a testcase to directly assert the type of the exception.
Modifications:
Assert directly that SslHandshakeTimeoutException is used
Result:
Test cleanup
Motivation:
It seems that `testSwallowedReadComplete(...)` may fail with an AssertionError sometimes after my tests. The relevant stack trace is as follows:
```
java.lang.AssertionError: expected:<IdleStateEvent(READER_IDLE, first)> but was:<null>
at org.junit.Assert.fail(Assert.java:88)
at org.junit.Assert.failNotEquals(Assert.java:834)
at org.junit.Assert.assertEquals(Assert.java:118)
at org.junit.Assert.assertEquals(Assert.java:144)
at io.netty.handler.flow.FlowControlHandlerTest.testSwallowedReadComplete(FlowControlHandlerTest.java:478)
at sun.reflect.NativeMethodAccessorImpl.invoke0(Native Method)
at sun.reflect.NativeMethodAccessorImpl.invoke(NativeMethodAccessorImpl.java:62)
at sun.reflect.DelegatingMethodAccessorImpl.invoke(DelegatingMethodAccessorImpl.java:43)
at java.lang.reflect.Method.invoke(Method.java:498)
at org.junit.runners.model.FrameworkMethod$1.runReflectiveCall(FrameworkMethod.java:50)
at org.junit.internal.runners.model.ReflectiveCallable.run(ReflectiveCallable.java:12)
at org.junit.runners.model.FrameworkMethod.invokeExplosively(FrameworkMethod.java:47)
at org.junit.internal.runners.statements.InvokeMethod.evaluate(InvokeMethod.java:17)
at org.junit.runners.ParentRunner.runLeaf(ParentRunner.java:325)
at org.junit.runners.BlockJUnit4ClassRunner.runChild(BlockJUnit4ClassRunner.java:78)
at org.junit.runners.BlockJUnit4ClassRunner.runChild(BlockJUnit4ClassRunner.java:57)
at org.junit.runners.ParentRunner$3.run(ParentRunner.java:290)
at org.junit.runners.ParentRunner$1.schedule(ParentRunner.java:71)
at org.junit.runners.ParentRunner.runChildren(ParentRunner.java:288)
at org.junit.runners.ParentRunner.access$000(ParentRunner.java:58)
at org.junit.runners.ParentRunner$2.evaluate(ParentRunner.java:268)
at org.junit.internal.runners.statements.RunBefores.evaluate(RunBefores.java:26)
at org.junit.internal.runners.statements.RunAfters.evaluate(RunAfters.java:27)
at org.junit.runners.ParentRunner.run(ParentRunner.java:363)
at org.eclipse.jdt.internal.junit4.runner.JUnit4TestReference.run(JUnit4TestReference.java:89)
at org.eclipse.jdt.internal.junit.runner.TestExecution.run(TestExecution.java:41)
at org.eclipse.jdt.internal.junit.runner.RemoteTestRunner.runTests(RemoteTestRunner.java:542)
at org.eclipse.jdt.internal.junit.runner.RemoteTestRunner.runTests(RemoteTestRunner.java:770)
at org.eclipse.jdt.internal.junit.runner.RemoteTestRunner.run(RemoteTestRunner.java:464)
at org.eclipse.jdt.internal.junit.runner.RemoteTestRunner.main(RemoteTestRunner.java:210)
```
Obviously the `readerIdleTime` of `IdleStateHandler` and the thread sleep time before `EmbeddedChannel.runPendingTasks` are both 100ms. And if `userEvents.poll()` happened before `userEvents.add(...)` or no `IdleStateEvent` fired at all, this test case would fail.
Modification:
Sleep for a little more time before running all pending tasks in the `EmbeddedChannel`.
Result:
Fix the problem of small probability of failure.
Motivation:
SslHandler currently throws a general SSLException if a wrap attempt
fails due to the SSLEngine being closed. If writes are queued the
failure rational typically requires more investigation to track down the
original failure from a previous event. We may have more informative
rational for the failure and so we should use it.
Modifications:
- SslHandler#wrap to use failure information from the handshake or prior
transport closure if available
Result:
More informative exceptions from SslHandler#wrap if the SSLEngine has
been previously closed.
Motivation:
The `FlowControlHandler` may cache the received messages in a queue in order to do the flow control. However, if this handler is manually removed from pipeline during runtime, those cached messages might not be passed to the next channel handler forever.
Modification:
Dequeue all these cached messages and call `ChannelHandlerContext.fireChannelRead(...)` in `handlerRemoved(...)` method.
Result:
Avoid losing the received messages.
Motivation:
`SslHandlerTest.testSessionTicketsWithTLSv12AndNoKey` does not require
BoringSSL and works with OpenSSL as well.
Modifications:
- Remove assume statement that expected BoringSSL;
Result:
Test works for any implementation of `OPENSSL` provider.
Motivation:
To ensure we not crash in all cases we should better check that the SSL pointer was not freed before using it.
Modifications:
Add missing `isDestroyed()` checks
Result:
Ensure we not crash due usage of freed pointer.
Motivation:
make the existing setter `ReferenceCountedOpenSslContext.setUseTasks` public
Modification:
Added the `public` qualified and removed the comment "for tests only"
Result:
Fixes#10288
Motivation:
We should respect jdk.tls.client.enableSessionTicketExtension and jdk.tls.server.enableSessionTicketExtension when using the native SSL implementation as well to make the usage of it easier and more consistent. These properties were introduced by JDK13:
https://seanjmullan.org/blog/2019/08/05/jdk13
Modifications:
Check if the properties are set to true and if so enable tickets
Result:
Easier to enable tickets and be more consistent
Motivation:
BoringSSL supports to automatically manage the session tickets to be used and so also rotate them etc. This is often prefered by users as it removed some complexity. We should support to make use of this.
Modifications:
- Allow to have setSessionTickets() called without an argument or an empty array
- Add tests
Result:
Easier usage of session tickets
Motivation:
OpenSslSession.getLocalCertificates() and getLocalPrincipal() must return null on client side if mTLS is not used as stated in the API documentation. At the moment this is not always the case
Modifications:
- Ensure we only return non-null if mTLS is used
- Add unit tests
Result:
Follow SSLSession API contract
Motivation:
EC is better than RSA because of the small key size, efficient and secure which makes it perfect for testing purposes.
Modification:
Added support to specify an algorithm (EC or RSA) in constructors for key pair generation. The default key size is 256-bits as promulgated by NSA Suite B.
Result:
Able to generate a self-signed certificate of EC or RSA.
Motivation:
We are far behind with the version of Conscrypt we are using during testing. We should ensure we use the latest.
Modifications:
- Update conscrypt dependency
- Ensure we use conscrypt provider in tests
- Add workarounds for conscrypt bugs in testsuite
Result:
Use latest Conscrypt release
Motivation:
Currently calculateSize method in AbstractTrafficShapingHandler calculates size for object of type ByteBuf or ByteBufHolder. Adding a check for FileRegion, makes it possible to do traffic shaping for FileRegion objects as well
Modification:
Check if object to be sent is of type FileRegion, if yes calculate the size using its count() method.
Co-authored-by: Dinesh Joshi <dinesh.joshi@apple.com>
Motivation:
We need to make some slightly changes to be able to build on Java15 as some previous deprecated methods now throw UnsupportedOperationException
Modifications:
- Add code to handle UnsupportedOperationException
- Revert previous applied workaround for bug that was fixed in Java15
- Add maven profile
Result:
Be able to build with latest Java15 EA release
Motivation:
We should provide more informations when ALPN is not supported and a user tries to use it.
Modifications:
- Use UnsupportedOperationException
Result:
Easier to debug ALPN problems
Motivation:
ALPN support was backported to java 8 lately. Ensure we support it if the user uses the latest java 8 release
Modifications:
- Update logic to be able to detect if ALPN is supported out of the box when using Java8
- Update jetty alpn version
Result:
Be able to use ALPN out of the box when using java 8u251
Motivation:
The `AbstractTrafficShapingHandler` caches the `ReopenReadTimerTask` instance in the channel attribute. However, if this handler is removed from the channel pipeline, this `ReopenReadTimerTask` instance may not be released.
Modification:
Release the channel attribute `REOPEN_TASK` in `handlerRemoved` method.
Result:
Avoid a channel attribute leak.
Motivation:
Only cipher suite is logged during handshake. Picked protocol is interesting too.
Modification:
Log protocol as well.
Result:
More interesting information when debugging TLS handshakes.
Motivation:
If the SslHandler is removed from the pipeline we also need to ensure we fail the handshake / close promise if it was not notified before as otherwise we may never do so.
Modifications:
- Correctly fail promise and notify pipeline if handshake was not done yet when the SslHandler is removed
- Add unit test
Result:
Fix https://github.com/netty/netty/issues/10158
Motivation:
JDK 14 was released and need some special settings to be able to build with. Also there seems to be one regression that we need to workaround for now.
Modifications:
- Add maven profile for JDK 14
- Update blockhound version to be able to work on JDK 14
- Add workaround for possible JDK 14 regression
Result:
Be able to build on JDK 14
Motivation:
Before release 4.1.23, there was only ONE call to exceptionCaught method when an ssl handshake failure occurs, now we have two when using the JDK provider.
Modifications:
- Ensure we only propagate one exception fi we already failed the handshake and channelInactive(...) produce an exception again
- Add unit test
Result:
Fixes https://github.com/netty/netty/issues/10119
Motivation:
As we have java8 as a minimum target we can use MethodHandles. We should do so when we expect to have a method called multiple times.
Modifications:
- Replace usage of reflection with MethodHandles where it makes sense
- Remove some code which was there to support java < 8
Result:
Faster code
Motivation:
In general, we will close the debug log in a product environment. However, logging without external level check may still affect performance as varargs will need to allocate an array.
Modification:
Add log level check simply before logging.
Result:
Improve performance slightly in a product environment.
Motivation:
At the moment the next / prev references are not set to "null" in the DefaultChannelHandlerContext once the ChannelHandler is removed. This is bad as it basically let users still use the ChannelHandlerContext of a ChannelHandler after it is removed and may produce very suprising behaviour.
Modifications:
- Fail if someone tries to use the ChannelHandlerContext once the ChannelHandler was removed (for outbound operations fail the promise, for inbound fire the error through the ChannelPipeline)
- Fix some handlers to ensure we not use the ChannelHandlerContext after the handler was removed
- Adjust DefaultChannelPipeline / DefaultChannelHandlerContext to fixes races with removal / replacement of handlers
Result:
Cleanup behaviour and make it more predictable for pipeline modifications
Motivation:
Often it is useful to be able to detect different sorts of SSL errors that cause the handshake to fail. To make this easier we should throw and explicit exception type for handshake timeouts.
Modifications:
- Add SslHandshakeTimeoutException (which extends SSLHandshakeException) and use it for handshake timeouts
- Adjust testcases
Result:
Easier to detect that handshake failed because of a timeout
Motivation:
We did not correctly account for produced bytes when SSL_write(...) returns -1 in all cases. This could lead to lost data and so a corrupt SSL connection.
Modifications:
- Always ensure we calculate the produced bytes correctly
- Add unit tests
Result:
Fixes https://github.com/netty/netty/issues/10041
Motivation:
In SniHandlerTest we depended on implementation details of the SSLEngine. We should better not doing this
Modifications:
Just release all outbound data
Result:
Dont depend on implementation details
Motivation:
Due incorrectly handling of reference count of the clientHello ByteBuf we may overrelease the buffer. This did show up in the log of a test:
11:55:16.595 [main] DEBUG i.n.h.ssl.SslClientHelloHandler - Unexpected client hello packet: 16030100bd010000b90303a74225676d1814ba57faff3b3663656ed05ee9dbb2a4dbb1bb1c32d2ea5fc39e0000000100008c0000001700150000164348415434e380824c45414e434c4f5544e38082434e000b000403000102000a00340032000e000d0019000b000c00180009000a00160017000800060007001400150004000500120013000100020003000f0010001100230000000d0020001e060106020603050105020503040104020403030103020303020102020203000f00010133740000
io.netty.util.IllegalReferenceCountException: refCnt: 0, decrement: 1
at io.netty.util.internal.ReferenceCountUpdater.toLiveRealRefCnt(ReferenceCountUpdater.java:74)
at io.netty.util.internal.ReferenceCountUpdater.release(ReferenceCountUpdater.java:138)
at io.netty.buffer.AbstractReferenceCountedByteBuf.release(AbstractReferenceCountedByteBuf.java:100)
at io.netty.handler.ssl.SslClientHelloHandler.releaseIfNotNull(SslClientHelloHandler.java:181)
at io.netty.handler.ssl.SslClientHelloHandler.select(SslClientHelloHandler.java:225)
at io.netty.handler.ssl.SslClientHelloHandler.decode(SslClientHelloHandler.java:149)
at io.netty.handler.codec.ByteToMessageDecoder.decodeRemovalReentryProtection(ByteToMessageDecoder.java:498)
at io.netty.handler.codec.ByteToMessageDecoder.callDecode(ByteToMessageDecoder.java:437)
at io.netty.handler.codec.ByteToMessageDecoder.channelRead(ByteToMessageDecoder.java:276)
at io.netty.channel.AbstractChannelHandlerContext.invokeChannelRead(AbstractChannelHandlerContext.java:377)
at io.netty.channel.AbstractChannelHandlerContext.invokeChannelRead(AbstractChannelHandlerContext.java:363)
at io.netty.channel.AbstractChannelHandlerContext.fireChannelRead(AbstractChannelHandlerContext.java:355)
at io.netty.channel.DefaultChannelPipeline$HeadContext.channelRead(DefaultChannelPipeline.java:1410)
at io.netty.channel.AbstractChannelHandlerContext.invokeChannelRead(AbstractChannelHandlerContext.java:377)
at io.netty.channel.AbstractChannelHandlerContext.invokeChannelRead(AbstractChannelHandlerContext.java:363)
at io.netty.channel.DefaultChannelPipeline.fireChannelRead(DefaultChannelPipeline.java:919)
at io.netty.channel.embedded.EmbeddedChannel.writeInbound(EmbeddedChannel.java:343)
at io.netty.handler.ssl.SniHandlerTest.testNonAsciiServerNameParsing(SniHandlerTest.java:297)
at sun.reflect.NativeMethodAccessorImpl.invoke0(Native Method)
at sun.reflect.NativeMethodAccessorImpl.invoke(NativeMethodAccessorImpl.java:62)
at sun.reflect.DelegatingMethodAccessorImpl.invoke(DelegatingMethodAccessorImpl.java:43)
at java.lang.reflect.Method.invoke(Method.java:498)
at org.junit.runners.model.FrameworkMethod$1.runReflectiveCall(FrameworkMethod.java:50)
at org.junit.internal.runners.model.ReflectiveCallable.run(ReflectiveCallable.java:12)
at org.junit.runners.model.FrameworkMethod.invokeExplosively(FrameworkMethod.java:47)
at org.junit.internal.runners.statements.InvokeMethod.evaluate(InvokeMethod.java:17)
at org.junit.internal.runners.statements.ExpectException.evaluate(ExpectException.java:19)
at org.junit.runners.ParentRunner.runLeaf(ParentRunner.java:325)
at org.junit.runners.BlockJUnit4ClassRunner.runChild(BlockJUnit4ClassRunner.java:78)
at org.junit.runners.BlockJUnit4ClassRunner.runChild(BlockJUnit4ClassRunner.java:57)
at org.junit.runners.ParentRunner$3.run(ParentRunner.java:290)
at org.junit.runners.ParentRunner$1.schedule(ParentRunner.java:71)
at org.junit.runners.ParentRunner.runChildren(ParentRunner.java:288)
at org.junit.runners.ParentRunner.access$000(ParentRunner.java:58)
at org.junit.runners.ParentRunner$2.evaluate(ParentRunner.java:268)
at org.junit.runners.ParentRunner.run(ParentRunner.java:363)
at org.junit.runners.Suite.runChild(Suite.java:128)
at org.junit.runners.Suite.runChild(Suite.java:27)
at org.junit.runners.ParentRunner$3.run(ParentRunner.java:290)
at org.junit.runners.ParentRunner$1.schedule(ParentRunner.java:71)
at org.junit.runners.ParentRunner.runChildren(ParentRunner.java:288)
at org.junit.runners.ParentRunner.access$000(ParentRunner.java:58)
at org.junit.runners.ParentRunner$2.evaluate(ParentRunner.java:268)
at org.junit.runners.ParentRunner.run(ParentRunner.java:363)
at org.junit.runner.JUnitCore.run(JUnitCore.java:137)
at com.intellij.junit4.JUnit4IdeaTestRunner.startRunnerWithArgs(JUnit4IdeaTestRunner.java:68)
at com.intellij.rt.execution.junit.IdeaTestRunner$Repeater.startRunnerWithArgs(IdeaTestRunner.java:47)
at com.intellij.rt.execution.junit.JUnitStarter.prepareStreamsAndStart(JUnitStarter.java:242)
at com.intellij.rt.execution.junit.JUnitStarter.main(JUnitStarter.java:70)
Modifications:
Correctly transfer lifetime of buffer and so not over-release it.
Result:
Correctly handle buffer lifecycle and so not swallow the original exception
Motivation:
Sometimes it is useful to do something depending on the Ssl ClientHello (like for example select a SslContext to use). At the moment we only allow to hook into the SNI extension but this is not enough.
Modifications:
Add SslClientHelloHandler which allows to hook into ClientHello messages. This class is now also the super class of AbstractSniHandler
Result:
More flexible processing of SSL handshakes
Motivation:
JDK is the default SSL provider and internally uses blocking IO operations.
Modifications:
Add allowBlockingCallsInside configuration for SslHandler runAllDelegate function.
Result:
When BlockHound is installed, SSL works out of the box with the default SSL provider.
Co-authored-by: violetagg <milesg78@gmail.com>
Motivation:
When SslHandler.finishWrap throws an exception, ensure that the promise and buf is not reused to avoid throwing IllegalArgumentException or IllegalReferenceCountException which causes the original exception to be lost.
Modification:
The change ensures that the values for the promise and bytebuf are nulled before calling finishWrap so that it will not be called again with the same arguments.
Result:
Fixes#9971 .
Co-authored-by: Norman Maurer <norman_maurer@apple.com>
Co-authored-by: Antony T Curtis <atcurtis@gmail.com>
Motivation
LoggingHandler is a very useful tool for debugging and for tracking the
sequence of events in a pipeline. LoggingHandler also includes the
functionality to log a hex dump of all written and received ByteBufs.
This can be useful for small messages, but for large messages, this can
potentially result in extremely large logs. E.g., a 1 MB payload will
result in over a 1 MB log message being recorded. While LoggingHandler
may only be intended for debugging, this can still be too excessive in
some debugging scenarios.
Modifications
* Create a new ByteBufFormat enum that allows users to specify "SIMPLE"
or "HEX_DUMP" logging for ByteBufs.
* For all constructors that currently accept a LogLevel parameter,
create new overloaded constructors that also accept this enum as a
parameter.
* Continue to record hex dumps by default.
Result
Users will be able to opt out of full hex dump recording, if they wish
to.
Motivation:
At the moment we create a new ChannelFutureListener per chunk when trying to write these to the underlying transport. This can be optimized by replacing the seperate write and flush call with writeAndFlush and only allocate the listener if the future is not complete yet.
Modifications:
- Replace seperate write and flush calls with writeAndFlush
- Only create listener if needed, otherwise execute directly
Result:
Less allocations
Motivation:
At the moment we use an extra field in ChunedWriteHandler to hold the current write. This is not needed and makes sense even more error-prone. We can just peek in the queue.
Modifications:
Use Queue.peek() to keep track of current write
Result:
Less error-prone code
Motivation:
In next major version of netty users should use ChannelHandler everywhere. We should ensure we do the same
Modifications:
Replace usage of deprecated classes / interfaces with ChannelHandler
Result:
Use non-deprecated code
Motivation:
At the moment resolving addresses during connect is done via setting an AddressResolverGroup on the Bootstrap. While this works most of the times as expected sometimes the user want to trigger the connect() from the Channel itself and not via the Bootstrap. For this cases we should provide a ChannelHandler that the user can use that will do the resolution.
Modifications:
Add ResolveAddressHandler and tests
Result:
Be able to resolve addresses without Bootstrap
Motivation:
41c47b4 introduced a change in an existing testcase which let the build fail when jdkCompatibilityMode is false.
Modifications:
Fix unit tests
Result:
Build passes when jdkCompatibilityMode is false as well
Motivation
A bug was introduced in #9806 which looks likely to be the cause of
#9919. SniHandler will enter an infinite loop if an SSL record is
received with SSL major version byte != 3 (i.e. something other than TLS
or SSL3.0)
Modifications
- Follow default path as intended for majorVersion != 3 in
AbstractSniHandler#decode(...)
- Add unit test to reproduce the hang
Result
Fixes#9919
Motivation:
When `consolidatedWhenNoReadInProgress` is true, `channel.writeAndFlush (data) .addListener (f-> channel.writeAndFlush (data2))` Will cause data2 to never be flushed.
Because the flush operation will synchronously execute the `channel.writeAndFlush (data2))` in the `listener`, and at this time, since the current execution thread is still an `eventloop`(`executor.inEventLoop()` was true), all handlers will be executed synchronously. At this time, since `nextScheduledFlush` is still not null, the `flush` operation of `data2` will be ignored in `FlushConsolidationHandler#scheduleFlush`.
Modification:
- reset `nextScheduledFlush` before `ctx.flush`
- use `ObjectUtil` to polish code
Result:
Fixes https://github.com/netty/netty/issues/9923
Motivation:
ByteToMessageDecoder requires using an intermediate List to put results into. This intermediate list adds overhead (memory/CPU) which grows as the number of objects increases. This overhead can be avoided by directly propagating events through the ChannelPipeline via ctx.fireChannelRead(...). This also makes the semantics more clear and allows us to keep track if we need to call ctx.read() in all cases.
Modifications:
- Remove List from the method signature of ByteToMessageDecoder.decode(...) and decodeLast(...)
- Adjust all sub-classes
- Adjust unit tests
- Fix javadocs.
Result:
Adjust ByteToMessageDecoder as noted in https://github.com/netty/netty/issues/8525.
Motivation:
We should use Objects.requireNonNull(...) as we require java8
Modifications:
Replace ObjectUtil.checkNonNull(...) with Objects.requireNonNull(...)
Result:
Code cleanup
Motivation:
At the moment our AbstractSniHandler makes the assemption that Handshake messages are not fragmented. This is incorrect as it is completely valid to split these across multiple TLSPlaintext records.
Thanks to @sskrobotov for bringing this to my attentation and to @Lukasa for the help.
Modifications:
- Adjust logic in AbstractSniHandler to handle fragmentation
- Add unit tests
Result:
Correctly handle fragmented Handshake message in AbstractSniHandler (and so SniHandler).
Motivation:
This is a PR to solve the problem described here: https://github.com/netty/netty/issues/9767
Basically this PR is to add two more APIs in SslContextBuilder, for users to directly specify
the KeyManager or TrustManager they want to use when building SslContext. This is very helpful
when users want to pass in some customized implementation of KeyManager or TrustManager.
Modification:
This PR takes the first approach in here:
https://github.com/netty/netty/issues/9767#issuecomment-551927994 (comment)
which is to immediately convert the managers into factories and let factories continue to pass
through Netty.
1. Add in SslContextBuilder the two APIs mentioned above
2. Create a KeyManagerFactoryWrapper and a TrustManagerFactoryWrapper, which take a KeyManager
and a TrustManager respectively. These are two simple wrappers that do the conversion from
XXXManager class to XXXManagerFactory class
3.Create a SimpleKeyManagerFactory class(and internally X509KeyManagerWrapper for compatibility),
which hides the unnecessary details such as KeyManagerFactorySpi. This serves the similar
functionalities with SimpleTrustManagerFactory, which was already inside Netty.
Result:
Easier usage.
Motivation:
MINIMAL_WAIT is the key constant. Thus, When we see the constant, we must read more code logic to see if it is ms or ns. So improving java doc will be better.
Modifications:
Improve java doc by add "10ms" such as DEFAULT_CHECK_INTERVAL with "1s".
Result:
Easy to know it is ms and keep same java doc style with other constants such as DEFAULT_CHECK_INTERVAL.
Motivation:
sun.security.ssl.X509KeyManagerImpl will not use "stable" aliases and so aliases may be changed during invocations. This means caching is useless. Because of this we should disable the cache if its used.
Modifications:
- Disable caching if sun.security.ssl.X509KeyManagerImpl is used
- Add tests
Result:
More protection against https://github.com/netty/netty/issues/9747.
Motivation:
At the moment te cache is not bound and so lead to huge memory consumpation. We should ensure its bound by default.
Modifications:
Ensure cache is bound
Result:
Fixes https://github.com/netty/netty/issues/9747.
Motivation
Per javadoc in 4.1.x SimpleChannelInboundHandler:
"Please keep in mind that channelRead0(ChannelHandlerContext, I) will be
renamed to messageReceived(ChannelHandlerContext, I) in 5.0."
Modifications
Rename aforementioned method and all references/overrides.
Result
Method is renamed.
Motivation:
Easier to debug SelfSignedCertificate failures.
Modifications:
Add first throwable as suppressed to thrown exception.
Result:
Less technical debt.
Motivation:
At the moment we directly extend the Recycler base class in our code which makes it hard to experiment with different Object pool implementation. It would be nice to be able to switch from one to another by using a system property in the future. This would also allow to more easily test things like https://github.com/netty/netty/pull/8052.
Modifications:
- Introduce ObjectPool class with static method that we now use internally to obtain an ObjectPool implementation.
- Wrap the Recycler into an ObjectPool and return it for now
Result:
Preparation for different ObjectPool implementations
Motivation:
It is common, especially in frameworks, for the parameters to `SslContextBuilder` methods to be built up as a `List` or similar `Iterable`. It is currently difficult to use `SslContextBuilder` in this case because it requires a conversion to array.
Modification:
Add overloads for methods that accept varargs to also accept `Iterable`, delegating by copying into an array.
Result:
Fixes#9293
Motivation:
Netty should respect JVM flags to control SSL protocols, eg. `-Djdk.tls.client.protocols`
Modification:
Changed `JdkSslContext` to use `SSLContext.getDefaultSSLParameters().getProtocols()` instead of `engine.getSupportedProtocols()` which is hardcoded as `SSLv2Hello, SSLv3, TLSv1, TLSv1.1, TLSv1.2`.
Result:
Without `-Djdk.tls.client.protocols`, `SSLContext.getDefaultSSLParameters().getProtocols()` returns `TLSv1, TLSv1.1, TLSv1.2`.
With `-Djdk.tls.client.protocols=TLSv1.2`, `SSLContext.getDefaultSSLParameters().getProtocols()` returns `TLSv1.2`.
Fixes#9706
Motivation:
In PR https://github.com/netty/netty/pull/9695 IdleStateEvents
were made to cache their string representation. The reason for this
was to avoid creating garbage as these values would be used frequently.
However, these objects may be used on multiple event loops and this
may cause an unexpected race to occur.
Modification:
Only make the events that Netty creates cache their toString representation.
Result:
No races.
Motivation:
We should aim to always use heap buffers when using the JDK SSLEngine for now as it wants to operate on byte[] and so will do internal memory copies if a non heap buffer is used. Beside this it will always return BUFFER_OVERFLOW when a smaller buffer then 16kb is used when calling wrap(...) (even if a very small amount of bytes should be encrypted). This can lead to excercive direct memory usage and pressure for no good reason.
Modifications:
Refactor internals of SslHandler to ensure we use heap buffers for the JDK SSLEngine impelementation
Result:
Less direct memory usage when JDK SSLEngine implementation is used
FlowControllerHandler currently may swell read-complete events in some situations.
* Fire read-complete event from flow controller, when it previously was swallowed
* New unit test to cover this case
Fixes#9667: FlowControllerHandler swallows read-complete event when auto-read is disabled
IdleStateEvent is very convenient and frequently used type of events. However both in runtime (logs) and in debug you need some manual steps to see their actual content. Default implementation generates worthless trash like this:
io.netty.handler.timeout.IdleStateEvent@27f674d
There are examples already, where event has convenient and useful toString implementation:
* io.netty.handler.proxy.ProxyConnectionEvent
* io.netty.handler.ssl.SslCompletionEvent
* Implement 'IdleStateEvent.toString' method.
* Unit test.
More useful String representation of IdleStateEvent
Motivation:
We have a public utility `OpenSsl.isAlpnSupported()` that helps users to
check if ALPN is available for `SslProvider.OPENSSL`. However, we do not
provide a similar utility for `SslProvider.JDK`. Therefore, users who
configured ALPN with `SslProvider.JDK` will get a runtime exception at
the time when a new connection will be created.
Modifications:
- Add public `SslProvider.isAlpnSupported(SslProvider)` utility method
that returns `true` if the `SslProvider` supports ALPN;
- Deprecate `OpenSsl.isAlpnSupported()`;
Result:
Users can verify if their environment supports ALPN with
`SslProvider` upfront (at bootstrap), instead of failing with
runtime exception when a new connection will be created.
Motivation:
Sometimes it is useful to be able to set attributes on a SslContext.
Modifications:
Add new method that will return a AttributeMap that is tied to a SslContext instance
Result:
Fixes https://github.com/netty/netty/issues/6542.
Motivation:
There is not need to use a CAS as everything is synchronized anyway. We can simplify the code a bit by not using it.
Modifications:
- Just remove the CAS operation
- Change from int to boolean
Result:
Code cleanup
Motivation:
Currently when the SslHandler coalesces outbound bytes it always
allocates a direct byte buffer. This does not make sense if the JDK
engine is being used as the bytes will have to be copied back to heap
bytes for the engine to operate on them.
Modifications:
Inspect engine type when coalescing outbound bytes and allocate heap
buffer if heap bytes are preferred by the engine.
Result:
Improved performance for JDK engine. Better performance in environments
without direct buffer pooling.
Motivation:
031c2e2e88 introduced some change to reduce the risk of have the `ReferenceCountedOpenSslContext` be destroyed while the `ReferenceCountedSslEngine` is still in us. Unfortunaly it missed to adjust a few tests which make assumptions about the refCnt of the context.
Modifications:
Adjust tests to take new semenatics into acount.
Result:
No more tests failures
Motivation:
With the Netty ref-counted OpenSSL implementation the parent SslContext
maintains state necessary for the SslEngine's it produces. However, it's
possible for the parent context to be closed and release those resources
before the child engines are finished which causes problems.
Modification:
Spawned ReferenceCountedOpenSslEngine's retain a reference to their
parent ReferenceCountedOpenSslContext.
Result:
The lifetime of the shared data is extended to include the lifetime of
the dependents.
Motiviation:
A lot of reentrancy bugs and cycles can happen because the DefaultPromise will notify the FutureListener directly when completely in the calling Thread if the Thread is the EventExecutor Thread. To reduce the risk of this we should always notify the listeners via the EventExecutor which basically means that we will put a task into the taskqueue of the EventExecutor and pick it up for execution after the setSuccess / setFailure methods complete the promise.
Modifications:
- Always notify via the EventExecutor
- Adjust test to ensure we correctly account for this
- Adjust tests that use the EmbeddedChannel to ensure we execute the scheduled work.
Result:
Reentrancy bugs related to the FutureListeners cant happen anymore.
Motivation:
Users can reuse the same FileChannel for different ChunkedNioFile
instances without being worried that FileChannel::position will be
changed concurrently by them.
In addition, FileChannel::read with absolute position allows to
use on *nix pread that is more efficient then fread.
Modifications:
Always use absolute FileChannel::read ops
Result:
Faster and more flexible uses of FileChannel for ChunkedNioFile
Motivation:
Due some bug we did endup with ClassCastExceptions in some cases. Beside this we also did not correctly handle the case when ReferenceCountedOpenSslEngineTest did produce tasks to run in on test.
Modifications:
- Correctly unwrap the engine before to fix ClassCastExceptions
- Run delegated tasks when needed.
Result:
All tests pass with different OpenSSL implementations (OpenSSL, BoringSSL etc)
Motivation:
SystemPropertyUtil already uses the AccessController internally so not need to wrap its usage with AccessController as well.
Modifications:
Remove explicit AccessController usage when SystemPropertyUtil is used.
Result:
Code cleanup
Motivation:
We did not correctly handle taskoffloading when using BoringSSL / OpenSSL. This could lead to the situation that we did not write the SSL alert out for the remote peer before closing the connection.
Modifications:
- Correctly handle exceptions when we resume processing on the EventLoop after the task was offloadded
- Ensure we call SSL.doHandshake(...) to flush the alert out to the outboundbuffer when an handshake exception was detected
- Correctly signal back the need to call WRAP again when a handshake exception is pending. This will ensure we flush out the alert in all cases.
Result:
No more failures when task offloading is used.
Motivation:
When using io.netty.handler.ssl.openssl.useTasks=true we may call ReferenceCountedOpenSslEngine.setKeyMaterial(...) from another thread and so need to synchronize and also check if the engine was destroyed in the meantime to eliminate of the possibility of a native crash.
The same is try when trying to access the authentication methods.
Modification:
- Add synchronized and isDestroyed() checks where missing
- Add null checks for the case when a callback is executed by another thread after the engine was destroyed already
- Move code for master key extraction to ReferenceCountedOpenSslEngine to ensure there can be no races.
Result:
No native crash possible anymore when using io.netty.handler.ssl.openssl.useTasks=true
Motivation:
At the moment it is not possible to build netty on a power 8 systems.
Modifications:
- Improve detection of the possibility of using Conscrypt
- Skip testsuite-shading when not on x86_64 as this is the only platform for which we build tcnative atm
- Only include classifier if on x86_64 for tcnative as dependency as this is the only platform for which we build tcnative atm
- Better detect if UDT test can be run
Result:
Fixes https://github.com/netty/netty/issues/9479
Motivation:
The java doc doesn't match the real case: The exception only happen when a write operation
cannot finish in a certain period of time instead of write idle happen.
Modification:
Correct java doc
Result:
java doc matched the real case
Motiviation:
EmbeddedChannel currently is quite differently in terms of semantics to other Channel implementations. We should better change it to be more closely aligned and so have the testing code be more robust.
Modifications:
- Change EmbeddedEventLoop.inEventLoop() to only return true if we currenlty run pending / scheduled tasks
- Change EmbeddedEventLoop.execute(...) to automatically process pending tasks if not already doing so
- Adjust a few tests for the new semantics (which is closer to other Channel implementations)
Result:
EmbeddedChannel works more like other Channel implementations
Motivation:
There are some extra log level checks (logger.isWarnEnabled()).
Modification:
Remove log level checks (logger.isWarnEnabled()) from io.netty.channel.epoll.AbstractEpollStreamChannel, io.netty.channel.DefaultFileRegion, io.netty.channel.nio.AbstractNioChannel, io.netty.util.HashedWheelTimer, io.netty.handler.stream.ChunkedWriteHandler and io.netty.channel.udt.nio.NioUdtMessageConnectorChannel
Result:
Fixes#9456
Motivation:
The Netty classes are initialized at build time by default for GraalVM Native Image compilation. This is configured via the `--initialize-at-build-time=io.netty` option. While this reduces start-up time it can lead to some problems:
- The class initializer of `io.netty.buffer.PooledByteBufAllocator` looks at the maximum memory size to compute the size of internal buffers. If the class initializer runs during image generation, then the buffers are sized according to the very large heap size that the image generator uses, and Netty allocates several arrays that are 16 MByte. The fix is to initialize the following 3 classes at run time: `io.netty.buffer.PooledByteBufAllocator,io.netty.buffer.ByteBufAllocator,io.netty.buffer.ByteBufUtil`. This fix was dependent on a GraalVM Native Image fix that was included in 19.2.0.
- The class initializer of `io.netty.handler.ssl.util.ThreadLocalInsecureRandom` needs to be initialized at runtime to ensure that the generated values are trully random and not fixed for each generated image.
- The class initializers of `io.netty.buffer.AbstractReferenceCountedByteBuf` and `io.netty.util.AbstractReferenceCounted` compute field offsets. While the field offset recomputation is necessary for correct execution as a native image these initializers also have logic that depends on the presence/absence of `sun.misc.Unsafe`, e.g., via the `-Dio.netty.noUnsafe=true` flag. The fix is to push these initializers to runtime so that the field offset lookups (and the logic depending on them) run at run time. This way no manual substitutions are necessary either.
Modifications:
Add `META-INF/native-image` configuration files that correctly trigger the inialization of the above classes at run time via `--initialize-at-run-time=...` flags.
Result:
Fixes the initialisation issues described above for Netty executables built with GraalVM.
Motivation:
14607979f6 added tests for using ACCP but did miss to use the same unwrapping technique of exceptions as JdkSslEngineTest. This can lead to test-failures on specific JDK versions
Modifications:
Add the same unwrapping code
Result:
No more test failures
Motivation:
Amazon lately released Amazon Corretto Crypto Provider, so we should include it in our testsuite
Modifications:
Add tests related to Amazon Corretto Crypto Provider
Result:
Test netty with Amazon Corretto Crypto Provider
Motivation:
If all we need is the FileChannel we should better use RandomAccessFile as FileInputStream and FileOutputStream use a finalizer.
Modifications:
Replace FileInputStream and FileOutputStream with RandomAccessFile when possible.
Result:
Fixes https://github.com/netty/netty/issues/8078.
Motivation:
When using OpenSSL and JDK < 11 is used we need to wrap the user provided X509ExtendedTrustManager to be able to support TLS1.3. We had a check in place that first tried to see if wrapping is needed at all which could lead to missleading calls of the user provided trustmanager. We should remove these calls and just always wrap if needed.
Modifications:
Always wrap if OpenSSL + JDK < 11 and TLS1.3 is supported
Result:
Less missleading calls to user provided trustmanager
Motivation:
Users' runtime systems may have incompatible dynamic libraries to the ones our
tcnative wrappers link to. Unfortunately, we cannot determine and catch these
scenarios (in which the JVM crashes) but we can make a more educated guess on
what library to load and try to find one that works better before crashing.
Modifications:
1) Build dynamically linked openSSL builds for more OSs (netty-tcnative)
2) Load native linux libraries with matching classifier (first)
Result:
More developers / users can use the dynamically-linked native libraries.
Motivation
Debugging SSL/TLS connections through wireshark is a pain -- if the cipher used involves Diffie-Hellman then it is essentially impossible unless you can have the client dump out the master key [1]
This is a work-in-progress change (tests & comments to come!) that introduces a new handler you can set on the SslContext to receive the master key & session id. I'm hoping to get feedback if a change in this vein would be welcomed.
An implementation that conforms to Wireshark's NSS key log[2] file is also included.
Depending on feedback on the PR going forward I am planning to "clean it up" by adding documentation, example server & tests. Implementation will need to be finished as well for retrieving the master key from the OpenSSL context.
[1] https://jimshaver.net/2015/02/11/decrypting-tls-browser-traffic-with-wireshark-the-easy-way/
[2] https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Mozilla/Projects/NSS/Key_Log_Format
Modification
- Added SslMasterKeyHandler
- An implementation of the handler that conforms to Wireshark's key log format is included.
Result:
Be able to debug SSL / TLS connections more easily.
Signed-off-by: Farid Zakaria <farid.m.zakaria@gmail.com>
Motivation:
Netty homepage(netty.io) serves both "http" and "https".
It's recommended to use https than http.
Modification:
I changed from "http://netty.io" to "https://netty.io"
Result:
No effects.
Motivation:
2c99fc0f12 introduced a change that eagly recycles the queue. Unfortunally it did not correct protect against re-entrance which can cause a NPE.
Modifications:
- Correctly protect against re-entrance by adding null checks
- Add unit test
Result:
Fixes https://github.com/netty/netty/issues/9319.
Motivation:
The AbstractSniHandler previously was willing to tolerate up to three
non-handshake records before a ClientHello that contained an SNI
extension field. This is, so far as I can tell, completely
unnecessary: no TLS implementation will be sending alerts or change
cipher spec messages before ClientHello.
Given that it was not possible to determine why this loop is in
the code to begin with, it's probably just best to remove it.
Modifications:
Remove the for loop.
Result:
The AbstractSniHandler will more rapidly determine whether it should
pass the records on to the default SSL handler.
Co-authored-by: Norman Maurer <norman_maurer@apple.com>
Motivation:
I've introduced netty/netty-tcnative#421 that introduced exposing OpenSSL master key & client/server
random values with the purpose of allowing someone to log them to debug the traffic via auxiliary tools like Wireshark (see also #8653)
Modification:
Augmented OpenSslEngineTest to include a test which manually decrypts the TLS ciphertext
after exposing the masterkey + client/server random. This acts as proof that the tc-native new methods work correctly!
Result:
More tests
Signed-off-by: Farid Zakaria <farid.m.zakaria@gmail.com>
Motivation:
Some methods that either override others or are implemented as part of implementation an interface did miss the `@Override` annotation
Modifications:
Add missing `@Override`s
Result:
Code cleanup
Motivation:
asList should only be used if there are multiple elements.
Modification:
Call to asList with only one argument could be replaced with singletonList
Result:
Cleaner code and a bit of memory savings
Motivation:
FlowControlHandler does use a recyclable ArrayDeque internally but only recycles it when the channel is closed. We should better recycle it once it is empty.
Modifications:
Recycle the deque as fast as possible
Result:
Less RecyclableArrayDeque instances.
Motivation:
Traffic shaping needs more accurate execution than scheduled one. So the
use of FixedRate instead.
Moreover the current implementation tends to create as many threads as
channels use a ChannelTrafficShapingHandlern, which is unnecessary.
Modifications:
Change the executor.schedule to executor.scheduleAtFixedRate in the
start and remove the reschedule call from run monitor thread since it
will be restarted by the Fixed rate executor.
Also fix a minor bug where restart was only doing start() without stop()
before.
Result:
Threads are more stable in number of cached and precision of traffic
shaping is enhanced.
Motivation:
SslHandler must generate control data as part of the TLS protocol, for example
to do handshakes. SslHandler doesn't capture the status of the future
corresponding to the writes when writing this control (aka non-application
data). If there is another handler before the SslHandler that wants to fail
these writes the SslHandler will not detect the failure and we must wait until
the handshake timeout to detect a failure.
Modifications:
- SslHandler should detect if non application writes fail, tear down the
channel, and clean up any pending state.
Result:
SslHandler detects non application write failures and cleans up immediately.
Motivation:
How we tried to detect if KeyManagerFactory is supported was not good enough for OpenSSL 1.1.0+ as it partly provided the API but not all of what is required.
This then lead to failures like:
[ERROR] Tests run: 1, Failures: 0, Errors: 1, Skipped: 0, Time elapsed: 1.102 s <<< FAILURE! - in io.netty.channel.epoll.EpollDomainSocketStartTlsTest
[ERROR] initializationError(io.netty.channel.epoll.EpollDomainSocketStartTlsTest) Time elapsed: 0.016 s <<< ERROR!
javax.net.ssl.SSLException: failed to set certificate and key
at io.netty.handler.ssl.ReferenceCountedOpenSslServerContext.newSessionContext(ReferenceCountedOpenSslServerContext.java:130)
at io.netty.handler.ssl.OpenSslServerContext.<init>(OpenSslServerContext.java:353)
at io.netty.handler.ssl.OpenSslServerContext.<init>(OpenSslServerContext.java:334)
at io.netty.handler.ssl.SslContext.newServerContextInternal(SslContext.java:468)
at io.netty.handler.ssl.SslContextBuilder.build(SslContextBuilder.java:457)
at io.netty.testsuite.transport.socket.SocketStartTlsTest.data(SocketStartTlsTest.java:93)
at sun.reflect.NativeMethodAccessorImpl.invoke0(Native Method)
at sun.reflect.NativeMethodAccessorImpl.invoke(NativeMethodAccessorImpl.java:62)
at sun.reflect.DelegatingMethodAccessorImpl.invoke(DelegatingMethodAccessorImpl.java:43)
at java.lang.reflect.Method.invoke(Method.java:498)
at org.junit.runners.model.FrameworkMethod$1.runReflectiveCall(FrameworkMethod.java:50)
at org.junit.internal.runners.model.ReflectiveCallable.run(ReflectiveCallable.java:12)
at org.junit.runners.model.FrameworkMethod.invokeExplosively(FrameworkMethod.java:47)
at org.junit.runners.Parameterized.allParameters(Parameterized.java:280)
at org.junit.runners.Parameterized.<init>(Parameterized.java:248)
at sun.reflect.NativeConstructorAccessorImpl.newInstance0(Native Method)
at sun.reflect.NativeConstructorAccessorImpl.newInstance(NativeConstructorAccessorImpl.java:62)
at sun.reflect.DelegatingConstructorAccessorImpl.newInstance(DelegatingConstructorAccessorImpl.java:45)
at java.lang.reflect.Constructor.newInstance(Constructor.java:423)
at org.junit.internal.builders.AnnotatedBuilder.buildRunner(AnnotatedBuilder.java:104)
at org.junit.internal.builders.AnnotatedBuilder.runnerForClass(AnnotatedBuilder.java:86)
at org.junit.runners.model.RunnerBuilder.safeRunnerForClass(RunnerBuilder.java:59)
at org.junit.internal.builders.AllDefaultPossibilitiesBuilder.runnerForClass(AllDefaultPossibilitiesBuilder.java:26)
at org.junit.runners.model.RunnerBuilder.safeRunnerForClass(RunnerBuilder.java:59)
at org.junit.internal.requests.ClassRequest.getRunner(ClassRequest.java:33)
at org.apache.maven.surefire.junit4.JUnit4Provider.execute(JUnit4Provider.java:362)
at org.apache.maven.surefire.junit4.JUnit4Provider.executeWithRerun(JUnit4Provider.java:273)
at org.apache.maven.surefire.junit4.JUnit4Provider.executeTestSet(JUnit4Provider.java:238)
at org.apache.maven.surefire.junit4.JUnit4Provider.invoke(JUnit4Provider.java:159)
at org.apache.maven.surefire.booter.ForkedBooter.invokeProviderInSameClassLoader(ForkedBooter.java:384)
at org.apache.maven.surefire.booter.ForkedBooter.runSuitesInProcess(ForkedBooter.java:345)
at org.apache.maven.surefire.booter.ForkedBooter.execute(ForkedBooter.java:126)
at org.apache.maven.surefire.booter.ForkedBooter.main(ForkedBooter.java:418)
Caused by: java.lang.Exception: Requires OpenSSL 1.0.2+
at io.netty.internal.tcnative.SSLContext.setCertificateCallback(Native Method)
at io.netty.handler.ssl.ReferenceCountedOpenSslServerContext.newSessionContext(ReferenceCountedOpenSslServerContext.java:126)
... 32 more
Modifications:
Also try to set the certification callback and only if this works as well mark KeyManagerFactory support as enabled.
Result:
Also correctly work when OpenSSL 1.1.0 is used.
Motivation:
Usafe of io.netty.handler.ssl.openssl.useKeyManagerFactory system property was deprecated in 4.1 so let us remove it.
Modifications:
Remove io.netty.handler.ssl.openssl.useKeyManagerFactory usage.
Result:
Remove support of deprecated system property
Motivation:
OOME is occurred by increasing suppressedExceptions because other libraries call Throwable#addSuppressed. As we have no control over what other libraries do we need to ensure this can not lead to OOME.
Modifications:
Only use static instances of the Exceptions if we can either dissable addSuppressed or we run on java6.
Result:
Not possible to OOME because of addSuppressed. Fixes https://github.com/netty/netty/issues/9151.
Motivation:
Depending on what OpenSSL library version we use / system property that is set we need to skip tests that use KeyManagerFactory.
Modifications:
Add missing assume checks for tests that use KeyManagerFactory.
Result:
All tests pass even if KeyManagerFactory is not supported
Motivation:
Previously, any 'relative' pipeline operations, such as
ctx.pipeline().replace(), .addBefore(), addAfter(), etc
would fail as the handler was not present in the pipeline.
Modification:
Used the pattern from ChannelInitializer when invoking configurePipeline().
Result:
Fixes#9131
Motivation:
As brought up in https://github.com/netty/netty/issues/8998, JKS can be substantially faster than pkcs12, JDK's new default. Without an option to set the KeyStore type you must change the configuration of the entire JVM which is impractical.
Modification:
- Allow to specify KeyStore type
- Add test case
Result:
Fixes https://github.com/netty/netty/issues/8998.
Motivation:
Bootstrap allows you to set a localAddress for outbound TCP connections, either via the Bootstrap.localAddress(localAddress) or Bootstrap.connect(remoteAddress, localAddress) methods. This works well if you want to bind to just one IP address on an interface. Sometimes you want to bind to a specific address based on the resolved remote address which should be possible.
Modifications:
Add DynamicAddressConnectHandler and tests
Result:
Fixes https://github.com/netty/netty/issues/8940.
Motivation:
Subclasses of `OpenSslKeyMaterial` implement `ReferenceCounted`. This means that a new object should have an initial refcount of 1. An `OpenSslPrivateKey.OpenSslPrivateKeyMaterial` object shares its refcount with the enclosing `OpenSslPrivateKey` object. This means the enclosing object's refcount must be incremented by 1 when an instance of `OpenSslPrivateKey.OpenSslPrivateKeyMaterial` is created. Otherwise, when the key material object is `release()`-ed, the refcount on the enclosing object will drop to 0 while it is still in use.
Modification:
- Increment the refcount in the constructor of `OpenSslPrivateKey.OpenSslPrivateKeyMaterial`
- Ensure we also always release the native certificates as well.
Result:
Refcount is now correct.
Motivation:
While OpenSslPrivateKeyMethod.* should never return null we should still guard against it to prevent any possible segfault.
Modifications:
- Throw SignatureException if null is returned
- Add unit test
Result:
No segfault when user returns null.
Motivation:
Seems like some analyzer / validation tools scan code to detect if it may produce some security risk because of just blindly accept certificates. Such a tool did tag our code because we have such an implementation (which then is actually never be used). We should just change the impl to not do this as it does not matter for us and it makes such tools happier.
Modifications:
Throw CertificateException
Result:
Fixes https://github.com/netty/netty/issues/9032
Motivation:
We should not throw check exceptions when the user calls sync*() but should better wrap it in a CompletionException to make it easier for people to reason about what happens.
Modifications:
- Change sync*() to throw CompletionException
- Adjust tests
- Add some more tests
Result:
Fixes https://github.com/netty/netty/issues/8521.
Motivation:
IdleStateHandler may trigger unexpected idle events when flushing large entries to slow clients.
Modification:
In netty design, we check the identity hash code and total pending write bytes of the current flush entry to determine whether there is a change in output. But if a large entry has been flushing slowly (for some reason, the network speed is slow, or the client processing speed is too slow to cause the TCP sliding window to be zero), the total pending write bytes size and identity hash code would remain unchanged.
Avoid this issue by adding checks for the current entry flush progress.
Result:
Fixes#8912 .
Motivation:
4079189f6b introduced OpenSslPrivateKeyMethodTest which will only be run when BoringSSL is used. As the assumeTrue(...) also guards the init of the static fields we need to ensure we only try to destroy these if BoringSSL is used as otherwise it will produce a NPE.
Modifications:
Check if BoringSSL is used before trying to destroy the resources.
Result:
No more NPE when BoringSSL is not used.
Motivation:
BoringSSL allows to customize the way how key signing is done an even offload it from the IO thread. We should provide a way to plugin an own implementation when BoringSSL is used.
Modifications:
- Introduce OpenSslPrivateKeyMethod that can be used by the user to implement custom signing by using ReferenceCountedOpenSslContext.setPrivateKeyMethod(...)
- Introduce static methods to OpenSslKeyManagerFactory which allows to create a KeyManagerFactory which supports to do keyless operations by let the use handle everything in OpenSslPrivateKeyMethod.
- Add testcase which verifies that everything works as expected
Result:
A user is able to customize the way how keys are signed.
Motivation:
During OpenSsl.java initialization, a SelfSignedCertificate is created
during the static initialization block to determine if OpenSsl
can be used.
The default key strength for SelfSignedCertificate was too low if FIPS
mode is used and BouncyCastle-FIPS is the only available provider
(necessary for compliance). A simple fix is to just augment the key
strength to the minimum required about by FIPS.
Modification:
Set default key bit length to 2048 but also allow it to be dynamically set via a system property for future proofing to more stricter security compliance.
Result:
Fixes#9018
Signed-off-by: Farid Zakaria <farid.m.zakaria@gmail.com>
Motivation:
Some SslProvider do support different types of keys and chains. We should fail fast if we can not support the type.
Related to https://github.com/netty/netty-tcnative/issues/455.
Modifications:
- Try to parse key / chain first and if if this fails throw and SslException
- Add tests.
Result:
Fail fast.