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Ronald Cron43ffc9d2021-12-09 10:09:36 +01001TLS 1.3 support
2===============
Hanno Becker9338f9f2020-05-31 07:39:50 +01003
4Overview
5--------
6
Ronald Crona9bdc8f2024-03-15 15:52:04 +01007Mbed TLS provides an implementation of the TLS 1.3 protocol. The TLS 1.3 support
8may be enabled using the MBEDTLS_SSL_PROTO_TLS1_3 configuration option.
Ronald Cron3785c902021-09-20 09:05:36 +02009
Ronald Cron2ba0d232022-07-01 11:25:49 +020010Support description
11-------------------
Ronald Cron3785c902021-09-20 09:05:36 +020012
Ronald Cronf164b6a2021-09-27 15:36:29 +020013- Overview
14
Ronald Cron2ba0d232022-07-01 11:25:49 +020015 - Mbed TLS implements both the client and the server side of the TLS 1.3
16 protocol.
Ronald Cronf164b6a2021-09-27 15:36:29 +020017
Ronald Cron2ba0d232022-07-01 11:25:49 +020018 - Mbed TLS supports ECDHE key establishment.
Ronald Cronf164b6a2021-09-27 15:36:29 +020019
Ronald Cron124ed8a2024-03-13 10:41:37 +010020 - Mbed TLS supports DHE key establishment.
Ronald Cronf164b6a2021-09-27 15:36:29 +020021
Ronald Cron93dcb1b2022-10-03 12:02:17 +020022 - Mbed TLS supports pre-shared keys for key establishment, pre-shared keys
23 provisioned externally as well as provisioned via the ticket mechanism.
24
25 - Mbed TLS supports session resumption via the ticket mechanism.
26
Ronald Cron1b606d82024-03-13 10:46:21 +010027 - Mbed TLS supports sending and receiving early data (0-RTT data).
Ronald Cronf164b6a2021-09-27 15:36:29 +020028
Ronald Cron3785c902021-09-20 09:05:36 +020029- Supported cipher suites: depends on the library configuration. Potentially
30 all of them:
31 TLS_AES_128_GCM_SHA256, TLS_AES_256_GCM_SHA384, TLS_CHACHA20_POLY1305_SHA256,
32 TLS_AES_128_CCM_SHA256 and TLS_AES_128_CCM_8_SHA256.
33
34- Supported ClientHello extensions:
35
Ronald Cron3cb707d2022-07-01 14:36:52 +020036 | Extension | Support |
37 | ---------------------------- | ------- |
38 | server_name | YES |
39 | max_fragment_length | no |
40 | status_request | no |
41 | supported_groups | YES |
42 | signature_algorithms | YES |
43 | use_srtp | no |
44 | heartbeat | no |
Ronald Cron124ed8a2024-03-13 10:41:37 +010045 | alpn | YES |
Ronald Cron3cb707d2022-07-01 14:36:52 +020046 | signed_certificate_timestamp | no |
47 | client_certificate_type | no |
48 | server_certificate_type | no |
49 | padding | no |
50 | key_share | YES |
Ronald Cron93dcb1b2022-10-03 12:02:17 +020051 | pre_shared_key | YES |
52 | psk_key_exchange_modes | YES |
Ronald Cron1b606d82024-03-13 10:46:21 +010053 | early_data | YES |
Ronald Cron3cb707d2022-07-01 14:36:52 +020054 | cookie | no |
55 | supported_versions | YES |
56 | certificate_authorities | no |
57 | post_handshake_auth | no |
58 | signature_algorithms_cert | no |
Ronald Cron3785c902021-09-20 09:05:36 +020059
Ronald Cron023987f2021-09-27 11:59:25 +020060
Ronald Cron3785c902021-09-20 09:05:36 +020061- Supported groups: depends on the library configuration.
Ronald Cron2ba0d232022-07-01 11:25:49 +020062 Potentially all ECDHE groups:
63 secp256r1, x25519, secp384r1, x448 and secp521r1.
Ronald Cronc3b510f2021-09-27 13:36:33 +020064
Ronald Cron124ed8a2024-03-13 10:41:37 +010065 Potentially all DHE groups:
66 ffdhe2048, ffdhe3072, ffdhe4096, ffdhe6144 and ffdhe8192.
Ronald Cronc3b510f2021-09-27 13:36:33 +020067
Ronald Cronfb877212021-09-28 15:49:39 +020068- Supported signature algorithms (both for certificates and CertificateVerify):
69 depends on the library configuration.
70 Potentially:
Ronald Cron2ba0d232022-07-01 11:25:49 +020071 ecdsa_secp256r1_sha256, ecdsa_secp384r1_sha384, ecdsa_secp521r1_sha512,
72 rsa_pkcs1_sha256, rsa_pkcs1_sha384, rsa_pkcs1_sha512, rsa_pss_rsae_sha256,
73 rsa_pss_rsae_sha384 and rsa_pss_rsae_sha512.
Ronald Cronc3b510f2021-09-27 13:36:33 +020074
Ronald Cronfb877212021-09-28 15:49:39 +020075 Note that in absence of an application profile standard specifying otherwise
Ronald Cron2ba0d232022-07-01 11:25:49 +020076 rsa_pkcs1_sha256, rsa_pss_rsae_sha256 and ecdsa_secp256r1_sha256 are
77 mandatory (see section 9.1 of the specification).
Ronald Cronc3b510f2021-09-27 13:36:33 +020078
Jerry Yu72a05652022-01-25 14:36:30 +080079- Supported versions:
80
Ronald Cron4d314962023-03-14 16:46:22 +010081 - TLS 1.2 and TLS 1.3 with version negotiation on client and server side.
Jerry Yu72a05652022-01-25 14:36:30 +080082
Ronald Cron2ba0d232022-07-01 11:25:49 +020083 - TLS 1.2 and TLS 1.3 can be enabled in the build independently of each
84 other.
Jerry Yu72a05652022-01-25 14:36:30 +080085
Ronald Cron3e7c4032021-09-27 14:22:38 +020086- Compatibility with existing SSL/TLS build options:
Ronald Cron3785c902021-09-20 09:05:36 +020087
Ronald Cron2ba0d232022-07-01 11:25:49 +020088 The TLS 1.3 implementation is compatible with nearly all TLS 1.2
89 configuration options in the sense that when enabling TLS 1.3 in the library
90 there is rarely any need to modify the configuration from that used for
91 TLS 1.2. There are two exceptions though: the TLS 1.3 implementation requires
92 MBEDTLS_PSA_CRYPTO_C and MBEDTLS_SSL_KEEP_PEER_CERTIFICATE, so these options
93 must be enabled.
Tom Cosgroveafb2fe12022-06-29 16:36:12 +010094
Ronald Cron3cb707d2022-07-01 14:36:52 +020095 Most of the Mbed TLS SSL/TLS related options are not supported or not
96 applicable to the TLS 1.3 implementation:
Ronald Cron3785c902021-09-20 09:05:36 +020097
Ronald Cron023987f2021-09-27 11:59:25 +020098 | Mbed TLS configuration option | Support |
99 | ---------------------------------------- | ------- |
Ronald Cron124ed8a2024-03-13 10:41:37 +0100100 | MBEDTLS_SSL_ALL_ALERT_MESSAGES | yes |
Ronald Cron023987f2021-09-27 11:59:25 +0200101 | MBEDTLS_SSL_ASYNC_PRIVATE | no |
102 | MBEDTLS_SSL_CONTEXT_SERIALIZATION | no |
103 | MBEDTLS_SSL_DEBUG_ALL | no |
104 | MBEDTLS_SSL_ENCRYPT_THEN_MAC | n/a |
105 | MBEDTLS_SSL_EXTENDED_MASTER_SECRET | n/a |
Tom Cosgroveafb2fe12022-06-29 16:36:12 +0100106 | MBEDTLS_SSL_KEEP_PEER_CERTIFICATE | no (1) |
Ronald Cron023987f2021-09-27 11:59:25 +0200107 | MBEDTLS_SSL_RENEGOTIATION | n/a |
108 | MBEDTLS_SSL_MAX_FRAGMENT_LENGTH | no |
109 | | |
Ronald Cron93dcb1b2022-10-03 12:02:17 +0200110 | MBEDTLS_SSL_SESSION_TICKETS | yes |
Ronald Cron2ba0d232022-07-01 11:25:49 +0200111 | MBEDTLS_SSL_SERVER_NAME_INDICATION | yes |
Ronald Cron023987f2021-09-27 11:59:25 +0200112 | MBEDTLS_SSL_VARIABLE_BUFFER_LENGTH | no |
113 | | |
114 | MBEDTLS_ECP_RESTARTABLE | no |
115 | MBEDTLS_ECDH_VARIANT_EVEREST_ENABLED | no |
116 | | |
Ronald Cron3cb707d2022-07-01 14:36:52 +0200117 | MBEDTLS_KEY_EXCHANGE_PSK_ENABLED | n/a (2) |
Ronald Cron023987f2021-09-27 11:59:25 +0200118 | MBEDTLS_KEY_EXCHANGE_ECDHE_PSK_ENABLED | n/a |
Ronald Cron023987f2021-09-27 11:59:25 +0200119 | MBEDTLS_KEY_EXCHANGE_ECDHE_RSA_ENABLED | n/a |
120 | MBEDTLS_KEY_EXCHANGE_ECDHE_ECDSA_ENABLED | n/a |
121 | MBEDTLS_KEY_EXCHANGE_ECDH_ECDSA_ENABLED | n/a |
122 | MBEDTLS_KEY_EXCHANGE_ECDH_RSA_ENABLED | n/a |
123 | MBEDTLS_KEY_EXCHANGE_ECJPAKE_ENABLED | n/a |
124 | | |
Tom Cosgroved7adb3c2022-06-30 09:48:40 +0100125 | MBEDTLS_PSA_CRYPTO_C | no (1) |
Ronald Cron3785c902021-09-20 09:05:36 +0200126
Tom Cosgroved7adb3c2022-06-30 09:48:40 +0100127 (1) These options must remain in their default state of enabled.
Ronald Crond8d2ea52022-10-04 15:48:06 +0200128 (2) See the TLS 1.3 specific build options section below.
129
130- TLS 1.3 specific build options:
131
132 - MBEDTLS_SSL_TLS1_3_COMPATIBILITY_MODE enables the support for middlebox
133 compatibility mode as defined in section D.4 of RFC 8446.
134
Ronald Cron9810b6d2022-10-20 14:22:45 +0200135 - MBEDTLS_SSL_TLS1_3_KEY_EXCHANGE_MODE_PSK_ENABLED enables the support for
136 the PSK key exchange mode as defined by RFC 8446. If it is the only key
137 exchange mode enabled, the TLS 1.3 implementation does not contain any code
138 related to key exchange protocols, certificates and signatures.
139
140 - MBEDTLS_SSL_TLS1_3_KEY_EXCHANGE_MODE_EPHEMERAL_ENABLED enables the
Ronald Cron10bf9562022-10-21 08:51:33 +0200141 support for the ephemeral key exchange mode. If it is the only key exchange
Ronald Crond8d2ea52022-10-04 15:48:06 +0200142 mode enabled, the TLS 1.3 implementation does not contain any code related
143 to PSK based key exchange. The ephemeral key exchange mode requires at least
144 one of the key exchange protocol allowed by the TLS 1.3 specification, the
145 parsing and validation of x509 certificates and at least one signature
146 algorithm allowed by the TLS 1.3 specification for signature computing and
147 verification.
148
Ronald Cron9810b6d2022-10-20 14:22:45 +0200149 - MBEDTLS_SSL_TLS1_3_KEY_EXCHANGE_MODE_PSK_EPHEMERAL_ENABLED enables the
150 support for the PSK ephemeral key exchange mode. If it is the only key
Ronald Crond8d2ea52022-10-04 15:48:06 +0200151 exchange mode enabled, the TLS 1.3 implementation does not contain any code
Ronald Crond8d2ea52022-10-04 15:48:06 +0200152 related to certificates and signatures. The PSK ephemeral key exchange
Ronald Cron9810b6d2022-10-20 14:22:45 +0200153 mode requires at least one of the key exchange protocol allowed by the
Ronald Crond8d2ea52022-10-04 15:48:06 +0200154 TLS 1.3 specification.
Ronald Cron3785c902021-09-20 09:05:36 +0200155
Ronald Cron653d5bc2021-12-09 14:35:56 +0100156
Ronald Cron3785c902021-09-20 09:05:36 +0200157Coding rules checklist for TLS 1.3
158----------------------------------
159
160The following coding rules are aimed to be a checklist for TLS 1.3 upstreaming
161work to reduce review rounds and the number of comments in each round. They
162come along (do NOT replace) the project coding rules
Dave Rodgmanb3196842022-10-12 16:47:08 +0100163(https://mbed-tls.readthedocs.io/en/latest/kb/development/mbedtls-coding-standards). They have been
Ronald Cron3785c902021-09-20 09:05:36 +0200164established and discussed following the review of #4882 that was the
165PR upstreaming the first part of TLS 1.3 ClientHello writing code.
166
167TLS 1.3 specific coding rules:
168
169 - TLS 1.3 specific C modules, headers, static functions names are prefixed
Ronald Cronb1944662021-09-27 13:56:46 +0200170 with `ssl_tls13_`. The same applies to structures and types that are
Ronald Cron3785c902021-09-20 09:05:36 +0200171 internal to C modules.
172
Ronald Cronb1944662021-09-27 13:56:46 +0200173 - TLS 1.3 specific exported functions, structures and types are
174 prefixed with `mbedtls_ssl_tls13_`.
175
176 - Use TLS1_3 in TLS 1.3 specific macros.
Ronald Cron3785c902021-09-20 09:05:36 +0200177
178 - The names of macros and variables related to a field or structure in the
179 TLS 1.3 specification should contain as far as possible the field name as
Ronald Cron72064b32021-09-27 13:54:28 +0200180 it is in the specification. If the field name is "too long" and we prefer
Ronald Cron3785c902021-09-20 09:05:36 +0200181 to introduce some kind of abbreviation of it, use the same abbreviation
182 everywhere in the code.
183
184 Example 1: #define CLIENT_HELLO_RANDOM_LEN 32, macro for the length of the
185 `random` field of the ClientHello message.
186
Dave Rodgmanc8aaac82021-10-18 12:56:53 +0100187 Example 2 (consistent abbreviation): `mbedtls_ssl_tls13_write_sig_alg_ext()`
Ronald Cron72064b32021-09-27 13:54:28 +0200188 and `MBEDTLS_TLS_EXT_SIG_ALG`, `sig_alg` standing for
Ronald Cron3785c902021-09-20 09:05:36 +0200189 `signature_algorithms`.
190
191 - Regarding vectors that are represented by a length followed by their value
192 in the data exchanged between servers and clients:
193
194 - Use `<vector name>_len` for the name of a variable used to compute the
195 length in bytes of the vector, where <vector name> is the name of the
196 vector as defined in the TLS 1.3 specification.
197
Ronald Cron99733f02021-09-27 13:58:21 +0200198 - Use `p_<vector_name>_len` for the name of a variable intended to hold
Ronald Cron3785c902021-09-20 09:05:36 +0200199 the address of the first byte of the vector length.
200
Ronald Cron99733f02021-09-27 13:58:21 +0200201 - Use `<vector_name>` for the name of a variable intended to hold the
Ronald Cron3785c902021-09-20 09:05:36 +0200202 address of the first byte of the vector value.
203
Ronald Cron99733f02021-09-27 13:58:21 +0200204 - Use `<vector_name>_end` for the name of a variable intended to hold
Ronald Cron3785c902021-09-20 09:05:36 +0200205 the address of the first byte past the vector value.
206
Ronald Cron99733f02021-09-27 13:58:21 +0200207 Those idioms should lower the risk of mis-using one of the address in place
208 of another one which could potentially lead to some nasty issues.
Ronald Cron3785c902021-09-20 09:05:36 +0200209
210 Example: `cipher_suites` vector of ClientHello in
Dave Rodgmanc8aaac82021-10-18 12:56:53 +0100211 `ssl_tls13_write_client_hello_cipher_suites()`
Ronald Cron72064b32021-09-27 13:54:28 +0200212 ```
213 size_t cipher_suites_len;
Ronald Cron99733f02021-09-27 13:58:21 +0200214 unsigned char *p_cipher_suites_len;
215 unsigned char *cipher_suites;
Ronald Cron72064b32021-09-27 13:54:28 +0200216 ```
Ronald Cron3785c902021-09-20 09:05:36 +0200217
Ronald Cronfecda8d2021-09-27 13:59:38 +0200218 - Where applicable, use:
219 - the macros to extract a byte from a multi-byte integer MBEDTLS_BYTE_{0-8}.
220 - the macros to write in memory in big-endian order a multi-byte integer
221 MBEDTLS_PUT_UINT{8|16|32|64}_BE.
222 - the macros to read from memory a multi-byte integer in big-endian order
223 MBEDTLS_GET_UINT{8|16|32|64}_BE.
224 - the macro to check for space when writing into an output buffer
225 `MBEDTLS_SSL_CHK_BUF_PTR`.
226 - the macro to check for data when reading from an input buffer
227 `MBEDTLS_SSL_CHK_BUF_READ_PTR`.
Ronald Cron3785c902021-09-20 09:05:36 +0200228
Ronald Cronfecda8d2021-09-27 13:59:38 +0200229 The three first types, MBEDTLS_BYTE_{0-8}, MBEDTLS_PUT_UINT{8|16|32|64}_BE
230 and MBEDTLS_GET_UINT{8|16|32|64}_BE improve the readability of the code and
231 reduce the risk of writing or reading bytes in the wrong order.
Ronald Cron3785c902021-09-20 09:05:36 +0200232
Ronald Cron72064b32021-09-27 13:54:28 +0200233 The two last types, `MBEDTLS_SSL_CHK_BUF_PTR` and
234 `MBEDTLS_SSL_CHK_BUF_READ_PTR`, improve the readability of the code and
Ronald Cron3785c902021-09-20 09:05:36 +0200235 reduce the risk of error in the non-completely-trivial arithmetic to
236 check that we do not write or read past the end of a data buffer. The
237 usage of those macros combined with the following rule mitigate the risk
238 to read/write past the end of a data buffer.
239
Ronald Cron72064b32021-09-27 13:54:28 +0200240 Examples:
241 ```
242 hs_hdr[1] = MBEDTLS_BYTE_2( total_hs_len );
243 MBEDTLS_PUT_UINT16_BE( MBEDTLS_TLS_EXT_SUPPORTED_VERSIONS, p, 0 );
244 MBEDTLS_SSL_CHK_BUF_PTR( p, end, 7 );
245 ```
Ronald Cron3785c902021-09-20 09:05:36 +0200246
247 - To mitigate what happened here
Dave Rodgman017a1992022-03-31 14:07:01 +0100248 (https://github.com/Mbed-TLS/mbedtls/pull/4882#discussion_r701704527) from
Ronald Cron3785c902021-09-20 09:05:36 +0200249 happening again, use always a local variable named `p` for the reading
250 pointer in functions parsing TLS 1.3 data, and for the writing pointer in
Ronald Cron3e7c4032021-09-27 14:22:38 +0200251 functions writing data into an output buffer and only that variable. The
252 name `p` has been chosen as it was already widely used in TLS code.
Ronald Cron3785c902021-09-20 09:05:36 +0200253
254 - When an TLS 1.3 structure is written or read by a function or as part of
255 a function, provide as documentation the definition of the structure as
256 it is in the TLS 1.3 specification.
257
258General coding rules:
259
Ronald Cron72064b32021-09-27 13:54:28 +0200260 - We prefer grouping "related statement lines" by not adding blank lines
Ronald Cron3785c902021-09-20 09:05:36 +0200261 between them.
262
263 Example 1:
Ronald Cron72064b32021-09-27 13:54:28 +0200264 ```
Ronald Cron3785c902021-09-20 09:05:36 +0200265 ret = ssl_tls13_write_client_hello_cipher_suites( ssl, buf, end, &output_len );
266 if( ret != 0 )
267 return( ret );
268 buf += output_len;
Ronald Cron72064b32021-09-27 13:54:28 +0200269 ```
Ronald Cron3785c902021-09-20 09:05:36 +0200270
271 Example 2:
Ronald Cron72064b32021-09-27 13:54:28 +0200272 ```
Ronald Cron3785c902021-09-20 09:05:36 +0200273 MBEDTLS_SSL_CHK_BUF_PTR( cipher_suites_iter, end, 2 );
274 MBEDTLS_PUT_UINT16_BE( cipher_suite, cipher_suites_iter, 0 );
275 cipher_suites_iter += 2;
Ronald Cron72064b32021-09-27 13:54:28 +0200276 ```
Ronald Cron3785c902021-09-20 09:05:36 +0200277
278 - Use macros for constants that are used in different functions, different
279 places in the code. When a constant is used only locally in a function
280 (like the length in bytes of the vector lengths in functions reading and
281 writing TLS handshake message) there is no need to define a macro for it.
282
Ronald Cron72064b32021-09-27 13:54:28 +0200283 Example: `#define CLIENT_HELLO_RANDOM_LEN 32`
Ronald Cron3785c902021-09-20 09:05:36 +0200284
285 - When declaring a pointer the dereferencing operator should be prepended to
286 the pointer name not appended to the pointer type:
287
Ronald Cron72064b32021-09-27 13:54:28 +0200288 Example: `mbedtls_ssl_context *ssl;`
Ronald Cron3785c902021-09-20 09:05:36 +0200289
290 - Maximum line length is 80 characters.
291
292 Exceptions:
293
294 - string literals can extend beyond 80 characters as we do not want to
295 split them to ease their search in the code base.
296
297 - A line can be more than 80 characters by a few characters if just looking
298 at the 80 first characters is enough to fully understand the line. For
299 example it is generally fine if some closure characters like ";" or ")"
300 are beyond the 80 characters limit.
301
Ronald Cron847c3582021-09-27 14:24:43 +0200302 If a line becomes too long due to a refactoring (for example renaming a
303 function to a longer name, or indenting a block more), avoid rewrapping
304 lines in the same commit: it makes the review harder. Make one commit with
305 the longer lines and another commit with just the rewrapping.
306
Ronald Cron3785c902021-09-20 09:05:36 +0200307 - When in successive lines, functions and macros parameters should be aligned
308 vertically.
309
310 Example:
Ronald Cron72064b32021-09-27 13:54:28 +0200311 ```
Ronald Cron8f6d39a2022-03-10 18:56:50 +0100312 int mbedtls_ssl_start_handshake_msg( mbedtls_ssl_context *ssl,
313 unsigned hs_type,
314 unsigned char **buf,
315 size_t *buf_len );
Ronald Cron72064b32021-09-27 13:54:28 +0200316 ```
Ronald Cron847c3582021-09-27 14:24:43 +0200317
318 - When a function's parameters span several lines, group related parameters
319 together if possible.
320
321 For example, prefer:
322
323 ```
Ronald Cron8f6d39a2022-03-10 18:56:50 +0100324 mbedtls_ssl_start_handshake_msg( ssl, hs_type,
325 buf, buf_len );
Ronald Cron847c3582021-09-27 14:24:43 +0200326 ```
327 over
328 ```
Ronald Cron8f6d39a2022-03-10 18:56:50 +0100329 mbedtls_ssl_start_handshake_msg( ssl, hs_type, buf,
330 buf_len );
Ronald Cron847c3582021-09-27 14:24:43 +0200331 ```
332 even if it fits.
Ronald Cron44b23b12022-05-31 16:05:13 +0200333
334
335Overview of handshake code organization
336---------------------------------------
337
338The TLS 1.3 handshake protocol is implemented as a state machine. The
Ronald Cron6b14c692022-06-24 13:45:04 +0200339functions `mbedtls_ssl_tls13_handshake_{client,server}_step` are the top level
Ronald Cron44b23b12022-05-31 16:05:13 +0200340functions of that implementation. They are implemented as a switch over all the
341possible states of the state machine.
342
343Most of the states are either dedicated to the processing or writing of an
344handshake message.
345
346The implementation does not go systematically through all states as this would
347result in too many checks of whether something needs to be done or not in a
348given state to be duplicated across several state handlers. For example, on
349client side, the states related to certificate parsing and validation are
350bypassed if the handshake is based on a pre-shared key and thus does not
351involve certificates.
352
353On the contrary, the implementation goes systematically though some states
354even if they could be bypassed if it helps in minimizing when and where inbound
355and outbound keys are updated. The `MBEDTLS_SSL_CLIENT_CERTIFICATE` state on
356client side is a example of that.
357
358The names of the handlers processing/writing an handshake message are
Ronald Cron6b14c692022-06-24 13:45:04 +0200359prefixed with `(mbedtls_)ssl_tls13_{process,write}`. To ease the maintenance and
Ronald Cron44b23b12022-05-31 16:05:13 +0200360reduce the risk of bugs, the code of the message processing and writing
361handlers is split into a sequence of stages.
362
363The sending of data to the peer only occurs in `mbedtls_ssl_handshake_step`
364between the calls to the handlers and as a consequence handlers do not have to
365care about the MBEDTLS_ERR_SSL_WANT_WRITE error code. Furthermore, all pending
366data are flushed before to call the next handler. That way, handlers do not
367have to worry about pending data when changing outbound keys.
368
369### Message processing handlers
370For message processing handlers, the stages are:
371
372* coordination stage: check if the state should be bypassed. This stage is
373optional. The check is either purely based on the reading of the value of some
374fields of the SSL context or based on the reading of the type of the next
375message. The latter occurs when it is not known what the next handshake message
376will be, an example of that on client side being if we are going to receive a
377CertificateRequest message or not. The intent is, apart from the next record
378reading to not modify the SSL context as this stage may be repeated if the
379next handshake message has not been received yet.
380
381* fetching stage: at this stage we are sure of the type of the handshake
382message we must receive next and we try to fetch it. If we did not go through
383a coordination stage involving the next record type reading, the next
384handshake message may not have been received yet, the handler returns with
385`MBEDTLS_ERR_SSL_WANT_READ` without changing the current state and it will be
386called again later.
387
388* pre-processing stage: prepare the SSL context for the message parsing. This
389stage is optional. Any processing that must be done before the parsing of the
390message or that can be done to simplify the parsing code. Some simple and
391partial parsing of the handshake message may append at that stage like in the
392ServerHello message pre-processing.
393
394* parsing stage: parse the message and restrict as much as possible any
395update of the SSL context. The idea of the pre-processing/parsing/post-processing
396organization is to concentrate solely on the parsing in the parsing function to
397reduce the size of its code and to simplify it.
398
399* post-processing stage: following the parsing, further update of the SSL
Ronald Cron139d0aa2022-06-14 18:45:44 +0200400context to prepare for the next incoming and outgoing messages. This stage is
Ronald Cron44b23b12022-05-31 16:05:13 +0200401optional. For example, secret and key computations occur at this stage, as well
402as handshake messages checksum update.
403
404* state change: the state change is done in the main state handler to ease the
405navigation of the state machine transitions.
406
407
408### Message writing handlers
409For message writing handlers, the stages are:
410
411* coordination stage: check if the state should be bypassed. This stage is
412optional. The check is based on the value of some fields of the SSL context.
413
414* preparation stage: prepare for the message writing. This stage is optional.
415Any processing that must be done before the writing of the message or that can
416be done to simplify the writing code.
417
418* writing stage: write the message and restrict as much as possible any update
419of the SSL context. The idea of the preparation/writing/finalization
420organization is to concentrate solely on the writing in the writing function to
421reduce the size of its code and simplify it.
422
423* finalization stage: following the writing, further update of the SSL
424context to prepare for the next incoming and outgoing messages. This stage is
425optional. For example, handshake secret and key computation occur at that
426stage (ServerHello writing finalization), switching to handshake keys for
427outbound message on server side as well.
428
429* state change: the state change is done in the main state handler to ease
430the navigation of the state machine transitions.