Module rustls::manual::_02_tls_vulnerabilities
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This section discusses vulnerabilities and design errors in the TLS protocol.
A review of protocol vulnerabilities
CBC MAC-then-encrypt ciphersuites
Back in 2000 Bellare and Namprempre discussed how to make authenticated encryption by composing separate encryption and authentication primitives. That paper included this table:
Composition Method | Privacy | Integrity | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
IND-CPA | IND-CCA | NM-CPA | INT-PTXT | |
Encrypt-and-MAC | insecure | insecure | insecure | secure |
MAC-then-encrypt | secure | insecure | insecure | secure |
Encrypt-then-MAC | secure | secure | secure | secure |
One may assume from this fairly clear result that encrypt-and-MAC and MAC-then-encrypt compositions would be quickly abandoned in favour of the remaining proven-secure option. But that didn’t happen, not in TLSv1.1 (2006) nor in TLSv1.2 (2008). Worse, both RFCs included incorrect advice on countermeasures for implementers, suggesting that the flaw was “not believed to be large enough to be exploitable”.
Lucky 13 (2013) exploited this flaw and affected all implementations, including those written after discovery. OpenSSL even had a memory safety vulnerability in the fix for Lucky 13, which gives a flavour of the kind of complexity required to remove the side channel.
rustls does not implement CBC MAC-then-encrypt ciphersuites for these reasons. TLSv1.3 removed support for these ciphersuites in 2018.
There are some further rejected options worth mentioning: RFC7366 defines Encrypt-then-MAC for TLS, but unfortunately cannot be negotiated without also supporting MAC-then-encrypt (clients cannot express “I offer CBC, but only EtM and not MtE”).
RSA PKCS#1 encryption
“RSA key exchange” in TLS involves the client choosing a large random value and encrypting it using the server’s public key. This has two overall problems:
- It provides no forward secrecy: later compromise of the server’s private key breaks confidentiality of all past sessions using that key. This is a crucial property in the presence of software that is often poor at keeping a secret.
- The padding used in practice in TLS (“PKCS#1”, or fully “RSAES-PKCS1-v1_5”) has been known to be broken since 1998.
In a similar pattern to the MAC-then-encrypt problem discussed above, TLSv1.0 (1999), TLSv1.1 (2006) and TLSv1.2 (2008) continued to specify use of PKCS#1 encryption, again with incrementally more complex and incorrect advice on countermeasures.
ROBOT (2018) showed that implementations were still vulnerable to these attacks twenty years later.
rustls does not support RSA key exchange. TLSv1.3 also removed support.
BEAST
BEAST (CVE-2011-3389) was demonstrated in 2011 by Thai Duong and Juliano Rizzo, and was another vulnerability in CBC-based ciphersuites in SSLv3.0 and TLSv1.0. CBC mode is vulnerable to adaptive chosen-plaintext attacks if the IV is predictable. In the case of these protocol versions, the IV was the previous block of ciphertext (as if the entire TLS session was one CBC ciphertext, albeit revealed incrementally). This was obviously predictable, since it was published on the wire.
OpenSSL contained a countermeasure for this problem from 2002 onwards: it encrypts an empty message before each real one, so that the IV used in the real message is unpredictable. This was turned off by default due to bugs in IE6.
TLSv1.1 fix this vulnerability, but not any of the other deficiencies of CBC mode (see above).
rustls does not support these ciphersuites.
CRIME
In 2002 John Kelsey discussed the length side channel as applied to compression of combined secret and attacker-chosen strings.
Compression continued to be an option in TLSv1.1 (2006) nor in TLSv1.2 (2008). Support in libraries was widespread.
CRIME (CVE-2012-4929) was demonstrated in 2012, again by Thai Duong and Juliano Rizzo. It attacked several protocols offering transparent compression of application data, allowing quick adaptive chosen-plaintext attacks against secret values like cookies.
rustls does not implement compression. TLSv1.3 also removed support.
Logjam / FREAK
Way back when SSL was first being born, circa 1995, the US government considered cryptography a munition requiring export control. SSL contained specific ciphersuites with dramatically small key sizes that were not subject to export control. These controls were dropped in 2000.
Since the “export-grade” ciphersuites no longer fulfilled any purpose, and because they were actively harmful to users, one may have expected software support to disappear quickly. This did not happen.
In 2015 the FREAK attack (CVE-2015-0204) and the Logjam attack (CVE-2015-4000) both demonstrated total breaks of security in the presence of servers that accepted export ciphersuites. FREAK factored 512-bit RSA keys, while Logjam optimised solving discrete logs in the 512-bit group used by many different servers.
Naturally, rustls does not implement any of these ciphersuites.
SWEET32
Block ciphers are vulnerable to birthday attacks, where the probability of repeating a block increases dramatically once a particular key has been used for many blocks. For block ciphers with 64-bit blocks, this becomes probable once a given key encrypts the order of 32GB of data.
Sweet32 (CVE-2016-2183) attacked this fact in the context of TLS support for 3DES, breaking confidentiality by analysing a large amount of attacker-induced traffic in one session.
rustls does not support any 64-bit block ciphers.
DROWN
DROWN (CVE-2016-0800) is a cross-protocol attack that breaks the security of TLSv1.2 and earlier (when used with RSA key exchange) by using SSLv2. It is required that the server uses the same key for both protocol versions.
rustls naturally does not support SSLv2, but most importantly does not support RSA key exchange for TLSv1.2.
Poodle
POODLE (CVE-2014-3566) is an attack against CBC mode ciphersuites in SSLv3. This was possible in most cases because some clients willingly downgraded to SSLv3 after failed handshakes for later versions.
rustls does not support CBC mode ciphersuites, or SSLv3. Note that rustls does not need to implement TLS_FALLBACK_SCSV
introduced as a countermeasure because it contains no ability to downgrade to earlier protocol versions.
GCM nonces
RFC5288 introduced GCM-based ciphersuites for use in TLS. Unfortunately the design was poor; it reused design for an unrelated security setting proposed in RFC5116.
GCM is a typical nonce-based AEAD: it requires a unique (but not necessarily unpredictable) 96-bit nonce for each encryption with a given key. The design specified by RFC5288 left two-thirds of the nonce construction up to implementations:
- wasting 8 bytes per TLS ciphertext,
- meaning correct operation cannot be tested for (eg, in protocol-level test vectors).
There were no trade-offs here: TLS has a 64-bit sequence number that is not allowed to wrap and would make an ideal nonce.
As a result, a 2016 study found:
- implementations from IBM, A10 and Citrix used randomly-chosen nonces, which are unlikely to be unique over long connections,
- an implementation from Radware used the same nonce for the first two messages.
rustls uses a counter from a random starting point for GCM nonces. TLSv1.3 and the Chacha20-Poly1305 TLSv1.2 ciphersuite standardise this method.
Renegotiation
In 2009 Marsh Ray and Steve Dispensa discovered that the renegotiation feature of all versions of TLS allows a MitM to splice a request of their choice onto the front of the client’s real HTTP request. A countermeasure was proposed and widely implemented to bind renegotiations to their previous negotiations; unfortunately this was insufficient.
rustls does not support renegotiation in TLSv1.2. TLSv1.3 also no longer supports renegotiation.
3SHAKE
3SHAKE (2014) described a complex attack that broke the “Secure Renegotiation” extension introduced as a countermeasure to the previous protocol flaw.
rustls does not support renegotiation for TLSv1.2 connections, or RSA key exchange, and both are required for this attack to work. rustls implements the “Extended Master Secret” (RFC7627) extension for TLSv1.2 which was standardised as a countermeasure.
TLSv1.3 no longer supports renegotiation and RSA key exchange. It also effectively incorporates the improvements made in RFC7627.
KCI
This vulnerability makes use of TLS ciphersuites (those offering static DH) which were standardised yet not widely used. However, they were implemented by libraries, and as a result enabled for various clients. It coupled this with misconfigured certificates (on services including facebook.com) which allowed their misuse to MitM connections.
rustls does not support static DH/EC-DH ciphersuites. We assert that it is misissuance to sign an EC certificate with the keyUsage extension allowing both signatures and key exchange. That it isn’t is probably a failure of CAB Forum baseline requirements.