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1 /*
2  * Copyright 2014 The Android Open Source Project
3  *
4  * Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
5  * you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
6  * You may obtain a copy of the License at
7  *
8  *      http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
9  *
10  * Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
11  * distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
12  * WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
13  * See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
14  * limitations under the License.
15  */
16 
17 package org.conscrypt;
18 
19 import java.net.Socket;
20 import javax.crypto.SecretKey;
21 import javax.net.ssl.KeyManager;
22 import javax.net.ssl.SSLEngine;
23 
24 /**
25  * Provider of key material for pre-shared key (PSK) key exchange used in TLS-PSK cipher suites.
26  *
27  * <h3>Overview of TLS-PSK</h3>
28  *
29  * <p>TLS-PSK is a set of TLS/SSL cipher suites which rely on a symmetric pre-shared key (PSK) to
30  * secure the TLS/SSL connection and mutually authenticate its peers. These cipher suites may be
31  * a more natural fit compared to conventional public key based cipher suites in some scenarios
32  * where communication between peers is bootstrapped via a separate step (for example, a pairing
33  * step) and requires both peers to authenticate each other. In such scenarios a symmetric key (PSK)
34  * can be exchanged during the bootstrapping step, removing the need to generate and exchange public
35  * key pairs and X.509 certificates.</p>
36  *
37  * <p>When a TLS-PSK cipher suite is used, both peers have to use the same key for the TLS/SSL
38  * handshake to succeed. Thus, both peers are implicitly authenticated by a successful handshake.
39  * This removes the need to use a {@code TrustManager} in conjunction with this {@code KeyManager}.
40  * </p>
41  *
42  * <h3>Supporting multiple keys</h3>
43  *
44  * <p>A peer may have multiple keys to choose from. To help choose the right key, during the
45  * handshake the server can provide a <em>PSK identity hint</em> to the client, and the client can
46  * provide a <em>PSK identity</em> to the server. The contents of these two pieces of information
47  * are specific to application-level protocols.</p>
48  *
49  * <p><em>NOTE: Both the PSK identity hint and the PSK identity are transmitted in cleartext.
50  * Moreover, these data are received and processed prior to peer having been authenticated. Thus,
51  * they must not contain or leak key material or other sensitive information, and should be
52  * treated (e.g., parsed) with caution, as untrusted data.</em></p>
53  *
54  * <p>The high-level flow leading to peers choosing a key during TLS/SSL handshake is as follows:
55  * <ol>
56  * <li>Server receives a handshake request from client.
57  * <li>Server replies, optionally providing a PSK identity hint to client.</li>
58  * <li>Client chooses the key.</li>
59  * <li>Client provides a PSK identity of the chosen key to server.</li>
60  * <li>Server chooses the key.</li>
61  * </ol></p>
62  *
63  * <p>In the flow above, either peer can signal that they do not have a suitable key, in which case
64  * the the handshake will be aborted immediately. This may enable a network attacker who does not
65  * know the key to learn which PSK identity hints or PSK identities are supported. If this is a
66  * concern then a randomly generated key should be used in the scenario where no key is available.
67  * This will lead to the handshake aborting later, due to key mismatch -- same as in the scenario
68  * where a key is available -- making it appear to the attacker that all PSK identity hints and PSK
69  * identities are supported.</p>
70  *
71  * <h3>Maximum sizes</h3>
72  *
73  * <p>The maximum supported sizes are as follows:
74  * <ul>
75  * <li>256 bytes for keys (see {@link #MAX_KEY_LENGTH_BYTES}),</li>
76  * <li>128 bytes for PSK identity and PSK identity hint (in modified UTF-8 representation) (see
77  * {@link #MAX_IDENTITY_LENGTH_BYTES} and {@link #MAX_IDENTITY_HINT_LENGTH_BYTES}).</li>
78  * </ul></p>
79  *
80  * <h3>Example</h3>
81  * The following example illustrates how to create an {@code SSLContext} which enables the use of
82  * TLS-PSK in {@code SSLSocket}, {@code SSLServerSocket} and {@code SSLEngine} instances obtained
83  * from it.
84  * <pre> {@code
85  * PSKKeyManager myPskKeyManager = ...;
86  *
87  * SSLContext sslContext = SSLContext.getInstance("TLS");
88  * sslContext.init(
89  *         new KeyManager[] &#123;myPskKeyManager&#125;,
90  *         new TrustManager[0], // No TrustManagers needed for TLS-PSK
91  *         null // Use the default source of entropy
92  *         );
93  *
94  * SSLSocket sslSocket = (SSLSocket) sslContext.getSocketFactory().createSocket(...);
95  * }</pre>
96  *
97  * @deprecated This abstraction is deprecated because it does not work with TLS 1.3.
98  * @hide
99  */
100 @Deprecated
101 @Internal
102 public interface PSKKeyManager extends KeyManager {
103 
104     /**
105      * Maximum supported length (in bytes) for PSK identity hint (in modified UTF-8 representation).
106      */
107     int MAX_IDENTITY_HINT_LENGTH_BYTES = 128;
108 
109     /** Maximum supported length (in bytes) for PSK identity (in modified UTF-8 representation). */
110     int MAX_IDENTITY_LENGTH_BYTES = 128;
111 
112     /** Maximum supported length (in bytes) for PSK key. */
113     int MAX_KEY_LENGTH_BYTES = 256;
114 
115     /**
116      * Gets the PSK identity hint to report to the client to help agree on the PSK for the provided
117      * socket.
118      *
119      * @return PSK identity hint to be provided to the client or {@code null} to provide no hint.
120      */
chooseServerKeyIdentityHint(Socket socket)121     String chooseServerKeyIdentityHint(Socket socket);
122 
123     /**
124      * Gets the PSK identity hint to report to the client to help agree on the PSK for the provided
125      * engine.
126      *
127      * @return PSK identity hint to be provided to the client or {@code null} to provide no hint.
128      */
chooseServerKeyIdentityHint(SSLEngine engine)129     String chooseServerKeyIdentityHint(SSLEngine engine);
130 
131     /**
132      * Gets the PSK identity to report to the server to help agree on the PSK for the provided
133      * socket.
134      *
135      * @param identityHint identity hint provided by the server or {@code null} if none provided.
136      *
137      * @return PSK identity to provide to the server. {@code null} is permitted but will be
138      *         converted into an empty string.
139      */
chooseClientKeyIdentity(String identityHint, Socket socket)140     String chooseClientKeyIdentity(String identityHint, Socket socket);
141 
142     /**
143      * Gets the PSK identity to report to the server to help agree on the PSK for the provided
144      * engine.
145      *
146      * @param identityHint identity hint provided by the server or {@code null} if none provided.
147      *
148      * @return PSK identity to provide to the server. {@code null} is permitted but will be
149      *         converted into an empty string.
150      */
chooseClientKeyIdentity(String identityHint, SSLEngine engine)151     String chooseClientKeyIdentity(String identityHint, SSLEngine engine);
152 
153     /**
154      * Gets the PSK to use for the provided socket.
155      *
156      * @param identityHint identity hint provided by the server to help select the key or
157      *        {@code null} if none provided.
158      * @param identity identity provided by the client to help select the key.
159      *
160      * @return key or {@code null} to signal to peer that no suitable key is available and to abort
161      *         the handshake.
162      */
getKey(String identityHint, String identity, Socket socket)163     SecretKey getKey(String identityHint, String identity, Socket socket);
164 
165     /**
166      * Gets the PSK to use for the provided engine.
167      *
168      * @param identityHint identity hint provided by the server to help select the key or
169      *        {@code null} if none provided.
170      * @param identity identity provided by the client to help select the key.
171      *
172      * @return key or {@code null} to signal to peer that no suitable key is available and to abort
173      *         the handshake.
174      */
getKey(String identityHint, String identity, SSLEngine engine)175     SecretKey getKey(String identityHint, String identity, SSLEngine engine);
176 }