armvirt target has been renamed to armsr (Arm SystemReady).
Signed-off-by: Mathew McBride <matt@traverse.com.au>
(cherry picked from commit 203deef82c)
Based on Paul Fertser <fercerpav@gmail.com>'s guidance:
Change AUTORELEASE in rules.mk to:
```
AUTORELEASE = $(if $(DUMP),0,$(shell sed -i "s/\$$(AUTORELEASE)/$(call commitcount,1)/" $(CURDIR)/Makefile))
```
then update all affected packages by:
```
for i in $(git grep -l PKG_RELEASE:=.*AUTORELEASE | sed 's^.*/\([^/]*\)/Makefile^\1^';);
do
make package/$i/clean
done
```
Signed-off-by: Tianling Shen <cnsztl@immortalwrt.org>
This reduces open coding and allows to easily add a knob to enable
it treewide, where chosen packages can still opt-out via "no-lto".
Some packages used LTO, but not the linker plugin. This unifies 'em
all to attempt to produce better code.
Quoting man gcc(1):
"This improves the quality of optimization by exposing more code to the
link-time optimizer."
Also use -flto=auto instead of -flto=jobserver, as it's not guaranteed
that every buildsystem uses +$(MAKE) correctly.
Signed-off-by: Andre Heider <a.heider@gmail.com>
Inline the preinst.arm-ce script. Support for including was added in
make 4.2 and is not working with older make versions.
Fixes: https://github.com/openwrt/openwrt/issues/11866
Signed-off-by: Chen Minqiang <ptpt52@gmail.com>
Fixes denial of service attack and buffer overflow against TLS 1.3
servers using session ticket resumption. When built with
--enable-session-ticket and making use of TLS 1.3 server code in
wolfSSL, there is the possibility of a malicious client to craft a
malformed second ClientHello packet that causes the server to crash.
This issue is limited to when using both --enable-session-ticket and TLS
1.3 on the server side. Users with TLS 1.3 servers, and having
--enable-session-ticket, should update to the latest version of wolfSSL.
Thanks to Max at Trail of Bits for the report and "LORIA, INRIA, France"
for research on tlspuffin.
Complete release notes https://github.com/wolfSSL/wolfssl/releases/tag/v5.5.1-stable
Fixes: CVE-2022-39173
Fixes: https://github.com/openwrt/luci/issues/5962
References: https://github.com/wolfSSL/wolfssl/issues/5629
Tested-by: Kien Truong <duckientruong@gmail.com>
Reported-by: Kien Truong <duckientruong@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Petr Štetiar <ynezz@true.cz>
This reverts commit a596a8396b as I've
just discovered private email, that the issue has CVE-2022-39173
assigned so I'm going to reword the commit and push it again.
Signed-off-by: Petr Štetiar <ynezz@true.cz>
Fixes denial of service attack and buffer overflow against TLS 1.3
servers using session ticket resumption. When built with
--enable-session-ticket and making use of TLS 1.3 server code in
wolfSSL, there is the possibility of a malicious client to craft a
malformed second ClientHello packet that causes the server to crash.
This issue is limited to when using both --enable-session-ticket and TLS
1.3 on the server side. Users with TLS 1.3 servers, and having
--enable-session-ticket, should update to the latest version of wolfSSL.
Thanks to Max at Trail of Bits for the report and "LORIA, INRIA, France"
for research on tlspuffin.
Complete release notes https://github.com/wolfSSL/wolfssl/releases/tag/v5.5.1-stable
Fixes: https://github.com/openwrt/luci/issues/5962
References: https://github.com/wolfSSL/wolfssl/issues/5629
Signed-off-by: Petr Štetiar <ynezz@true.cz>
Rename libwolfssl-cpu-crypto to libwolfsslcpu-crypto so that the
regular libwolfssl version comes first when running:
opkg install libwolfssl
Normally, if the package name matches the opkg parameter, that package
is preferred. However, for libraries, the ABI version string is
appended to the package official name, and the short name won't match.
Failing a name match, the candidate packages are sorted in alphabetical
order, and a dash will come before any number. So in order to prefer
the original library, the dash should be removed from the alternative
library.
Fixes: c3e7d86d2b (wolfssl: add libwolfssl-cpu-crypto package)
Signed-off-by: Eneas U de Queiroz <cotequeiroz@gmail.com>
Move CONFIG_PACKAGE_libwolfssl-benchmark from the top of
PKG_CONFIG_DEPENDS to after PKG_ABI_VERSION is set.
This avoids changing the ABI version hash whether the bnechmark package
package is selected or not.
Fixes: 05df135cac (wolfssl: Rebuild when libwolfssl-benchmark gets changes)
Signed-off-by: Eneas U de Queiroz <cotequeiroz@gmail.com>
libwolfssl-cpu-crypto is a variant of libwolfssl with support for
cryptographic CPU instructions on x86_64 and aarch64.
On aarch64, wolfSSL does not perform run-time detection, so the library
will crash when the AES functions are called. A preinst script attempts
to check for support by querying /proc/cpuinfo, if installed in a
running system. When building an image, the script will check the
DISTRIB_TARGET value in /etc/openwrt_release, and will abort
installation if target is bcm27xx.
Signed-off-by: Eneas U de Queiroz <cotequeiroz@gmail.com>
This forces a rebuild of the wolfssl package when the
libwolfssl-benchmark OpenWrt package gets activated or deactivated.
Without this change the wolfssl build will fail when it compiled without
libwolfssl-benchmark before and it gets activated for the next build.
Fixes: 18fd12edb8 ("wolfssl: add benchmark utility")
Signed-off-by: Hauke Mehrtens <hauke@hauke-m.de>
Disable the usage of target specific CPU crypto instructions by default
to allow the package being shared again. Since WolfSSL does not offer
a stable ABI or a long term support version suitable for OpenWrt release
timeframes, we're forced to frequently update it which is greatly
complicated by the package being nonshared.
People who want or need CPU crypto instruction support can enable it in
menuconfig while building custom images for the few platforms that support
them.
Signed-off-by: Jo-Philipp Wich <jo@mein.io>
This version fixes two vulnerabilities:
-CVE-2022-34293[high]: Potential for DTLS DoS attack
-[medium]: Ciphertext side channel attack on ECC and DH operations.
The patch fixing x86 aesni build has been merged upstream.
Signed-off-by: Eneas U de Queiroz <cotequeiroz@gmail.com>
This enables building WolfSSL with Curve448, which can be used by
Strongswan. This has been tested on a Linksys E8450, running OpenWrt
22.03-rc4.
This allows parity with OpenSSL, which already supports Curve448 in
OpenWrt 21.02.
Fixesopenwrt/packages#18812.
Signed-off-by: Joel Low <joel@joelsplace.sg>
libwolfssl-benchmark should NOT be compiled as nonshared but
currently there is a bug where, on buildbot stage2, the package
is recompiled to build libwolfssl-benchmark and the dependency
change to the new libwolfssl version.
Each dependant package will now depend on the new wolfssl package
instead of the one previously on stage1 that has a different package
HASH.
Set the nonshared PKGFLAGS global while this gets investigated
and eventually fixed.
Fixes: 0a2edc2714 ("wolfssl: enable CPU crypto instructions")
Signed-off-by: Christian 'Ansuel' Marangi <ansuelsmth@gmail.com>
This enables AES & SHA CPU instructions for compatible armv8, and x86_64
architectures. Add this to the hardware acceleration choice, since they
can't be enabled at the same time.
The package was marked non-shared, since the arm CPUs may or may not
have crypto extensions enabled based on licensing; bcm27xx does not
enable them. There is no run-time detection of this for arm.
NOTE:
Should this be backported to a release branch, it must be done shortly
before a new minor release, because the change to nonshared will remove
libwolfssl from the shared packages, but the nonshared are only built in
a subsequent release!
Signed-off-by: Eneas U de Queiroz <cotequeiroz@gmail.com>
Enabling different hardware crypto acceleration should not change the
library ABI. Add them to PKG_CONFIG_DEPENDS after the ABI version hash
has been computed.
Signed-off-by: Eneas U de Queiroz <cotequeiroz@gmail.com>
This is mostly a bug fix release, including two that were already
patched here:
- 300-fix-SSL_get_verify_result-regression.patch
- 400-wolfcrypt-src-port-devcrypto-devcrypto_aes.c-remove-.patch
Signed-off-by: Eneas U de Queiroz <cotequeiroz@gmail.com>
Fixes two high-severity vulnerabilities:
- CVE-2022-25640: A TLS v1.3 server who requires mutual authentication
can be bypassed. If a malicious client does not send the
certificate_verify message a client can connect without presenting a
certificate even if the server requires one.
- CVE-2022-25638: A TLS v1.3 client attempting to authenticate a TLS
v1.3 server can have its certificate heck bypassed. If the sig_algo in
the certificate_verify message is different than the certificate
message checking may be bypassed.
Signed-off-by: Eneas U de Queiroz <cotequeiroz@gmail.com>
x509v3 SAN extension is required to generate a certificate compatible with
chromium-based web browsers (version >58)
It can be disabled via unsetting CONFIG_WOLFSSL_ALT_NAMES
Signed-off-by: Sergey V. Lobanov <sergey@lobanov.in>
It's the default anyway and this just looks confusing, as if it wasn't.
Switch to AUTORELEASE while at it.
The binary size is unchanged.
Signed-off-by: Andre Heider <a.heider@gmail.com>
This gates out anything that might introduce semantically frivolous jitter,
maximizing chance of identical object files.
The binary size shrinks by 8kb:
1244352 staging_dir/target-mipsel_24kc_musl/usr/lib/libwolfssl.so.4.8.1.39c36f2f
1236160 staging_dir/target-mipsel_24kc_musl/usr/lib/libwolfssl.so.4.8.1.39c36f2f
Signed-off-by: Andre Heider <a.heider@gmail.com>
"Alternate certification chains, as oppossed to requiring full chain
validataion. Certificate validation behavior is relaxed, similar to
openssl and browsers. Only the peer certificate must validate to a trusted
certificate. Without this, all certificates sent by a peer must be
used in the trust chain or the connection will be rejected."
This fixes e.g. uclient-fetch and curl connecting to servers using a Let's
Encrypt certificate which are cross-signed by the now expired
DST Root CA X3, see [0].
This is the recommended solution from upstream [1].
The binary size increases by ~12.3kb:
1236160 staging_dir/target-mipsel_24kc_musl/usr/lib/libwolfssl.so.4.8.1.39c36f2f
1248704 staging_dir/target-mipsel_24kc_musl/usr/lib/libwolfssl.so.4.8.1.39c36f2f
[0] https://github.com/openwrt/packages/issues/16674
[1] https://github.com/wolfSSL/wolfssl/issues/4443#issuecomment-934926793
Signed-off-by: Andre Heider <a.heider@gmail.com>
[bump PKG_RELEASE]
Signed-off-by: David Bauer <mail@david-bauer.net>
Changes from 4.7.0:
Fix one high (OCSP verification issue) and two low vulnerabilities
Improve compatibility layer
Other improvements and fixes
For detailed changes refer to https://github.com/wolfSSL/wolfssl/releases
Signed-off-by: Ivan Pavlov <AuthorReflex@gmail.com>
Support for wolfSSL has been upstreamed to the master OpenVPN branch
in f6dca235ae560597a0763f0c98fcc9130b80ccf4, so we can use wolfSSL
directly in OpenVPN. So no more needed differnt SSL engine for OpenVPN
in systems based on wolfSSL library
Compiled && tested on ramips/mt7620, ramips/mt7621
Signed-off-by: Ivan Pavlov <AuthorReflex@gmail.com>
Since commit 6467de5a8840 ("Randomize z ordinates in scalar
mult when timing resistant") wolfssl requires a RNG for an EC
key when the hardened built option is selected.
wc_ecc_set_rng is only available when built hardened, so there
is no safe way to install the RNG to the key regardless whether
or not wolfssl is compiled hardened.
Always export wc_ecc_set_rng so tools such as hostapd can install
RNG regardless of the built settings for wolfssl.
Signed-off-by: David Bauer <mail@david-bauer.net>
Biggest fix for this version is CVE-2021-3336, which has already been
applied here. There are a couple of low severity security bug fixes as
well.
Three patches are no longer needed, and were removed; the one remaining
was refreshed.
This tool shows no ABI changes:
https://abi-laboratory.pro/index.php?view=objects_report&l=wolfssl&v1=4.6.0&v2=4.7.0
Signed-off-by: Eneas U de Queiroz <cotequeiroz@gmail.com>
This fixes the build on MIPS BE like ath25 and ath79 target.
We get this error message when linking libwolfssl:
mips-openwrt-linux-musl/bin/ld: /home/hauke/openwrt/openwrt/staging_dir/target-mips_mips32_musl/usr/lib/libwolfssl.so: unknown type [0x7000002a] section `.MIPS.abiflags'
mips-openwrt-linux-musl/bin/ld: /home/hauke/openwrt/openwrt/staging_dir/target-mips_mips32_musl/usr/lib/libwolfssl.so: unknown type [0x7000002a] section `.MIPS.abiflags'
mips-openwrt-linux-musl/bin/ld: skipping incompatible /home/hauke/openwrt/openwrt/staging_dir/target-mips_mips32_musl/usr/lib/libwolfssl.so when searching for -lwolfssl
mips-openwrt-linux-musl/bin/ld: cannot find -lwolfssl
collect2: error: ld returned 1 exit status
This reverts commit 2591c83b34.
Signed-off-by: Hauke Mehrtens <hauke@hauke-m.de>
This should fix CVE-2021-3336:
DoTls13CertificateVerify in tls13.c in wolfSSL through 4.6.0 does not
cease processing for certain anomalous peer behavior (sending an
ED22519, ED448, ECC, or RSA signature without the corresponding
certificate).
The patch is backported from the upstream wolfssl development branch.
Signed-off-by: Hauke Mehrtens <hauke@hauke-m.de>
This version fixes a large number of bugs, although no security
vulnerabilities are listed.
Full changelog at:
https://www.wolfssl.com/docs/wolfssl-changelog/
or, as part of the version's README.md:
https://github.com/wolfSSL/wolfssl/blob/v4.6.0-stable/README.md
Due a number of API additions, size increases from 374.7K to 408.8K for
arm_cortex_a9_vfpv3-d16. The ABI does not change from previous version.
Backported patches were removed; remaining patch was refreshed.
Signed-off-by: Eneas U de Queiroz <cotequeiroz@gmail.com>
This enables all OpenSSL API available. It is required to avoid some
silent failures, such as when performing client certificate validation.
Package size increases from 356.6K to 374.7K for
arm_cortex-a9_vfpv3-d16.
Signed-off-by: Eneas U de Queiroz <cotequeiroz@gmail.com>
Tnis adds the --enable-lighty option to configure, enabling the minimum
API needed to run lighttpd, in the packages feed. Size increase is
about 120 bytes for arm_cortex-a9_vfpv3-d16.
While at it, speed up build by disabling crypt bench/test.
Signed-off-by: Eneas U de Queiroz <cotequeiroz@gmail.com>
This fixes the following security problems:
* In earlier versions of wolfSSL there exists a potential man in the
middle attack on TLS 1.3 clients.
* Denial of service attack on TLS 1.3 servers from repetitively sending
ChangeCipherSpecs messages. (CVE-2020-12457)
* Potential cache timing attacks on public key operations in builds that
are not using SP (single precision). (CVE-2020-15309)
* When using SGX with EC scalar multiplication the possibility of side-
channel attacks are present.
* Leak of private key in the case that PEM format private keys are
bundled in with PEM certificates into a single file.
* During the handshake, clear application_data messages in epoch 0 are
processed and returned to the application.
Full changelog:
https://www.wolfssl.com/docs/wolfssl-changelog/
Fix a build error on big endian systems by backporting a pull request:
https://github.com/wolfSSL/wolfssl/pull/3255
The size of the ipk increases on mips BE by 1.4%
old:
libwolfssl24_4.4.0-stable-2_mips_24kc.ipk: 386246
new:
libwolfssl24_4.5.0-stable-1_mips_24kc.ipk: 391528
Signed-off-by: Hauke Mehrtens <hauke@hauke-m.de>
32-bit x86 fail to compile fast-math feature when compiled with frame
pointer, which uses a register used in a couple of inline asm functions.
Previous versions of wolfssl had this by default. Keeping an extra
register available may increase performance, so it's being restored for
all architectures.
Signed-off-by: Eneas U de Queiroz <cotequeiroz@gmail.com>
This version adds many bugfixes, including a couple of security
vulnerabilities:
- For fast math (enabled by wpa_supplicant option), use a constant time
modular inverse when mapping to affine when operation involves a
private key - keygen, calc shared secret, sign.
- Change constant time and cache resistant ECC mulmod. Ensure points
being operated on change to make constant time.
Signed-off-by: Eneas U de Queiroz <cotequeiroz@gmail.com>