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Revision: 1.43
Committed: Fri Aug 28 23:06:33 2009 UTC (14 years, 9 months ago) by root
Branch: MAIN
CVS Tags: rel-0_9
Changes since 1.42: +64 -50 lines
Log Message:
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File Contents

# Content
1 =head1 NAME
2
3 AnyEvent::MP::Transport - actual transport protocol handler
4
5 =head1 SYNOPSIS
6
7 use AnyEvent::MP::Transport;
8
9 =head1 DESCRIPTION
10
11 This module implements (and documents) the actual transport protocol for
12 AEMP.
13
14 See the "PROTOCOL" section below if you want to write another client for
15 this protocol.
16
17 =head1 FUNCTIONS/METHODS
18
19 =over 4
20
21 =cut
22
23 package AnyEvent::MP::Transport;
24
25 use common::sense;
26
27 use Scalar::Util ();
28 use List::Util ();
29 use MIME::Base64 ();
30 use Storable ();
31 use JSON::XS ();
32
33 use Digest::MD6 ();
34 use Digest::HMAC_MD6 ();
35
36 use AE ();
37 use AnyEvent::Socket ();
38 use AnyEvent::Handle 4.92 ();
39
40 use AnyEvent::MP::Config ();
41
42 our $PROTOCOL_VERSION = 0;
43
44 =item $listener = mp_listener $host, $port, <constructor-args>
45
46 Creates a listener on the given host/port using
47 C<AnyEvent::Socket::tcp_server>.
48
49 See C<new>, below, for constructor arguments.
50
51 Defaults for peerhost, peerport and fh are provided.
52
53 =cut
54
55 sub mp_server($$@) {
56 my ($host, $port, @args) = @_;
57
58 AnyEvent::Socket::tcp_server $host, $port, sub {
59 my ($fh, $host, $port) = @_;
60
61 my $tp = new AnyEvent::MP::Transport
62 fh => $fh,
63 peerhost => $host,
64 peerport => $port,
65 @args,
66 ;
67 $tp->{keepalive} = $tp;
68 }
69 }
70
71 =item $guard = mp_connect $host, $port, <constructor-args>, $cb->($transport)
72
73 =cut
74
75 sub mp_connect {
76 my $release = pop;
77 my ($host, $port, @args) = @_;
78
79 my $state;
80
81 $state = AnyEvent::Socket::tcp_connect $host, $port, sub {
82 my ($fh, $nhost, $nport) = @_;
83
84 return $release->() unless $fh;
85
86 $state = new AnyEvent::MP::Transport
87 fh => $fh,
88 peername => $host,
89 peerhost => $nhost,
90 peerport => $nport,
91 release => $release,
92 @args,
93 ;
94 };
95
96 \$state
97 }
98
99 =item new AnyEvent::MP::Transport
100
101 # immediately starts negotiation
102 my $transport = new AnyEvent::MP::Transport
103 # mandatory
104 fh => $filehandle,
105 local_id => $identifier,
106 on_recv => sub { receive-callback },
107 on_error => sub { error-callback },
108
109 # optional
110 on_eof => sub { clean-close-callback },
111 on_connect => sub { successful-connect-callback },
112 greeting => { key => value },
113
114 # tls support
115 tls_ctx => AnyEvent::TLS,
116 peername => $peername, # for verification
117 ;
118
119 =cut
120
121 sub LATENCY() { 3 } # assumed max. network latency
122
123 our @FRAMINGS = qw(json storable); # the framing types we accept and send, in order of preference
124 our @AUTH_SND = qw(tls_md6_64_256 hmac_md6_64_256); # auth types we send
125 our @AUTH_RCV = (@AUTH_SND, qw(tls_anon cleartext)); # auth types we accept
126
127 #AnyEvent::Handle::register_write_type mp_record => sub {
128 #};
129
130 sub new {
131 my ($class, %arg) = @_;
132
133 my $self = bless \%arg, $class;
134
135 $self->{queue} = [];
136
137 {
138 Scalar::Util::weaken (my $self = $self);
139
140 my $config = AnyEvent::MP::Config::config;
141
142 my $latency = $config->{network_latency} || LATENCY;
143
144 $self->{secret} = $config->{secret}
145 unless exists $self->{secret};
146
147 $self->{timeout} = $config->{monitor_timeout} || $AnyEvent::MP::Kernel::MONITOR_TIMEOUT
148 unless exists $self->{timeout};
149
150 $self->{timeout} -= $latency;
151
152 $self->{timeout} = 1 + $latency
153 if $self->{timeout} < 1 + $latency;
154
155 my $secret = $self->{secret};
156
157 if (exists $config->{cert}) {
158 $self->{tls_ctx} = {
159 sslv2 => 0,
160 sslv3 => 0,
161 tlsv1 => 1,
162 verify => 1,
163 cert => $config->{cert},
164 ca_cert => $config->{cert},
165 verify_require_client_cert => 1,
166 };
167 }
168
169 $self->{hdl} = new AnyEvent::Handle
170 fh => delete $self->{fh},
171 autocork => 1,
172 no_delay => 1,
173 on_error => sub {
174 $self->error ($_[2]);
175 },
176 rtimeout => $latency,
177 peername => delete $self->{peername},
178 ;
179
180 my $greeting_kv = $self->{greeting} ||= {};
181
182 $self->{local_node} ||= $AnyEvent::MP::Kernel::NODE;
183
184 $greeting_kv->{tls} = "1.0" if $self->{tls_ctx};
185 $greeting_kv->{provider} = "AE-$AnyEvent::MP::Kernel::VERSION";
186 $greeting_kv->{peeraddr} = AnyEvent::Socket::format_hostport $self->{peerhost}, $self->{peerport};
187 $greeting_kv->{timeout} = $self->{timeout};
188
189 # send greeting
190 my $lgreeting1 = "aemp;$PROTOCOL_VERSION"
191 . ";$self->{local_node}"
192 . ";" . (join ",", @AUTH_RCV)
193 . ";" . (join ",", @FRAMINGS)
194 . (join "", map ";$_=$greeting_kv->{$_}", keys %$greeting_kv);
195
196 my $lgreeting2 = MIME::Base64::encode_base64 AnyEvent::MP::Kernel::nonce (66), "";
197
198 $self->{hdl}->push_write ("$lgreeting1\012$lgreeting2\012");
199
200 # expect greeting
201 $self->{hdl}->rbuf_max (4 * 1024);
202 $self->{hdl}->push_read (line => sub {
203 my $rgreeting1 = $_[1];
204
205 my ($aemp, $version, $rnode, $auths, $framings, @kv) = split /;/, $rgreeting1;
206
207 if ($aemp ne "aemp") {
208 return $self->error ("unparsable greeting");
209 } elsif ($version != $PROTOCOL_VERSION) {
210 return $self->error ("version mismatch (we: $PROTOCOL_VERSION, they: $version)");
211 } elsif ($rnode eq $self->{local_node}) {
212 AnyEvent::MP::Global::avoid_seed ($self->{seed})
213 if exists $self->{seed};
214
215 return $self->error ("I refuse to talk to myself");
216 } elsif ($AnyEvent::MP::Kernel::NODE{$rnode} && $AnyEvent::MP::Kernel::NODE{$rnode}{transport}) {
217 return $self->error ("$rnode already connected, not connecting again.");
218 }
219
220 $self->{remote_node} = $rnode;
221
222 $self->{remote_greeting} = {
223 map /^([^=]+)(?:=(.*))?/ ? ($1 => $2) : (),
224 @kv
225 };
226
227 # read nonce
228 $self->{hdl}->push_read (line => sub {
229 my $rgreeting2 = $_[1];
230
231 "$lgreeting1\012$lgreeting2" ne "$rgreeting1\012$rgreeting2" # echo attack?
232 or return $self->error ("authentication error, echo attack?");
233
234 my $tls = $self->{tls_ctx} && 1 == int $self->{remote_greeting}{tls};
235
236 my $s_auth;
237 for my $auth_ (split /,/, $auths) {
238 if (grep $auth_ eq $_, @AUTH_SND and ($auth_ !~ /^tls_/ or $tls)) {
239 $s_auth = $auth_;
240 last;
241 }
242 }
243
244 defined $s_auth
245 or return $self->error ("$auths: no common auth type supported");
246
247 my $s_framing;
248 for my $framing_ (split /,/, $framings) {
249 if (grep $framing_ eq $_, @FRAMINGS) {
250 $s_framing = $framing_;
251 last;
252 }
253 }
254
255 defined $s_framing
256 or return $self->error ("$framings: no common framing method supported");
257
258 my $key;
259 my $lauth;
260
261 if ($tls) {
262 $self->{tls} = $lgreeting2 lt $rgreeting2 ? "connect" : "accept";
263 $self->{hdl}->starttls ($self->{tls}, $self->{tls_ctx});
264
265 $lauth =
266 $s_auth eq "tls_anon" ? ""
267 : $s_auth eq "tls_md6_64_256" ? Digest::MD6::md6_hex "$lgreeting1\012$lgreeting2\012$rgreeting1\012$rgreeting2\012"
268 : return $self->error ("$s_auth: fatal, selected unsupported snd auth method");
269
270 } elsif (length $secret) {
271 return $self->error ("$s_auth: fatal, selected unsupported snd auth method")
272 unless $s_auth eq "hmac_md6_64_256"; # hardcoded atm.
273
274 $key = Digest::MD6::md6 $secret;
275 # we currently only support hmac_md6_64_256
276 $lauth = Digest::HMAC_MD6::hmac_md6_hex $key, "$lgreeting1\012$lgreeting2\012$rgreeting1\012$rgreeting2\012", 64, 256;
277
278 } else {
279 return $self->error ("unable to handshake TLS and no shared secret configured");
280 }
281
282 $self->{hdl}->push_write ("$s_auth;$lauth;$s_framing\012");
283
284 # read the authentication response
285 $self->{hdl}->push_read (line => sub {
286 my ($hdl, $rline) = @_;
287
288 my ($auth_method, $rauth2, $r_framing) = split /;/, $rline;
289
290 my $rauth =
291 $auth_method eq "hmac_md6_64_256" ? Digest::HMAC_MD6::hmac_md6_hex $key, "$rgreeting1\012$rgreeting2\012$lgreeting1\012$lgreeting2\012", 64, 256
292 : $auth_method eq "cleartext" ? unpack "H*", $secret
293 : $auth_method eq "tls_anon" ? ($tls ? "" : "\012\012") # \012\012 never matches
294 : $auth_method eq "tls_md6_64_256" ? ($tls ? Digest::MD6::md6_hex "$rgreeting1\012$rgreeting2\012$lgreeting1\012$lgreeting2\012" : "\012\012")
295 : return $self->error ("$auth_method: fatal, selected unsupported rcv auth method");
296
297 if ($rauth2 ne $rauth) {
298 return $self->error ("authentication failure/shared secret mismatch");
299 }
300
301 $self->{s_framing} = $s_framing;
302
303 $hdl->rbuf_max (undef);
304 my $queue = delete $self->{queue}; # we are connected
305
306 $self->{hdl}->rtimeout ($self->{remote_greeting}{timeout});
307 $self->{hdl}->wtimeout ($self->{timeout} - LATENCY);
308 $self->{hdl}->on_wtimeout (sub { $self->send ([]) });
309
310 $self->connected;
311
312 # send queued messages
313 $self->send ($_)
314 for @$queue;
315
316 # receive handling
317 my $src_node = $self->{node};
318
319 my $rmsg; $rmsg = sub {
320 $_[0]->push_read ($r_framing => $rmsg);
321
322 local $AnyEvent::MP::Kernel::SRCNODE = $src_node;
323 AnyEvent::MP::Kernel::_inject (@{ $_[1] });
324 };
325 $hdl->push_read ($r_framing => $rmsg);
326 });
327 });
328 });
329 }
330
331 $self
332 }
333
334 sub error {
335 my ($self, $msg) = @_;
336
337 delete $self->{keepalive};
338
339 # $AnyEvent::MP::Kernel::WARN->(9, "$self->{peerhost}:$self->{peerport} $msg");#d#
340
341 $self->{node}->transport_error (transport_error => $self->{node}{id}, $msg)
342 if $self->{node} && $self->{node}{transport} == $self;
343
344 (delete $self->{release})->()
345 if exists $self->{release};
346
347 # $AnyEvent::MP::Kernel::WARN->(7, "$self->{peerhost}:$self->{peerport}: $msg");
348 $self->destroy;
349 }
350
351 sub connected {
352 my ($self) = @_;
353
354 delete $self->{keepalive};
355
356 (delete $self->{release})->()
357 if exists $self->{release};
358
359 $AnyEvent::MP::Kernel::WARN->(9, "$self->{peerhost}:$self->{peerport} connected as $self->{remote_node}");
360
361 my $node = AnyEvent::MP::Kernel::add_node ($self->{remote_node});
362 Scalar::Util::weaken ($self->{node} = $node);
363 $node->transport_connect ($self);
364 }
365
366 sub send {
367 $_[0]{hdl}->push_write ($_[0]{s_framing} => $_[1]);
368 }
369
370 sub destroy {
371 my ($self) = @_;
372
373 (delete $self->{release})->()
374 if exists $self->{release};
375
376 $self->{hdl}->destroy
377 if $self->{hdl};
378 }
379
380 sub DESTROY {
381 my ($self) = @_;
382
383 $self->destroy;
384 }
385
386 =back
387
388 =head1 PROTOCOL
389
390 The AEMP protocol is relatively simple, and consists of three phases which
391 are symmetrical for both sides: greeting (followed by optionally switching
392 to TLS mode), authentication and packet exchange.
393
394 The protocol is designed to allow both full-text and binary streams.
395
396 The greeting consists of two text lines that are ended by either an ASCII
397 CR LF pair, or a single ASCII LF (recommended).
398
399 =head2 GREETING
400
401 All the lines until after authentication must not exceed 4kb in length,
402 including line delimiter. Afterwards there is no limit on the packet size
403 that can be received.
404
405 =head3 First Greeting Line
406
407 Example:
408
409 aemp;0;rain;tls_md6_64_256,hmac_md6_64_256,tls_anon,cleartext;json,storable;timeout=12;peeraddr=10.0.0.1:48082
410
411 The first line contains strings separated (not ended) by C<;>
412 characters. The first five strings are fixed by the protocol, the
413 remaining strings are C<KEY=VALUE> pairs. None of them may contain C<;>
414 characters themselves (when escaping is needed, use C<%3b> to represent
415 C<;> and C<%25> to represent C<%>)-
416
417 The fixed strings are:
418
419 =over 4
420
421 =item protocol identification
422
423 The constant C<aemp> to identify this protocol.
424
425 =item protocol version
426
427 The protocol version supported by this end, currently C<0>. If the
428 versions don't match then no communication is possible. Minor extensions
429 are supposed to be handled through additional key-value pairs.
430
431 =item the node ID
432
433 This is the node ID of the connecting node.
434
435 =item the acceptable authentication methods
436
437 A comma-separated list of authentication methods supported by the
438 node. Note that AnyEvent::MP supports a C<hex_secret> authentication
439 method that accepts a clear-text password (hex-encoded), but will not use
440 this authentication method itself.
441
442 The receiving side should choose the first authentication method it
443 supports.
444
445 =item the acceptable framing formats
446
447 A comma-separated list of packet encoding/framing formats understood. The
448 receiving side should choose the first framing format it supports for
449 sending packets (which might be different from the format it has to accept).
450
451 =back
452
453 The remaining arguments are C<KEY=VALUE> pairs. The following key-value
454 pairs are known at this time:
455
456 =over 4
457
458 =item timeout=<seconds>
459
460 The amount of time after which this node should be detected as dead unless
461 some data has been received. The node is responsible to send traffic
462 reasonably more often than this interval (such as every timeout minus five
463 seconds).
464
465 =item provider=<module-version>
466
467 The software provider for this implementation. For AnyEvent::MP, this is
468 C<AE-0.0> or whatever version it currently is at.
469
470 =item peeraddr=<host>:<port>
471
472 The peer address (socket address of the other side) as seen locally.
473
474 =item tls=<major>.<minor>
475
476 Indicates that the other side supports TLS (version should be 1.0) and
477 wishes to do a TLS handshake.
478
479 =back
480
481 =head3 Second Greeting Line
482
483 After this greeting line there will be a second line containing a
484 cryptographic nonce, i.e. random data of high quality. To keep the
485 protocol text-only, these are usually 32 base64-encoded octets, but
486 it could be anything that doesn't contain any ASCII CR or ASCII LF
487 characters.
488
489 I<< The two nonces B<must> be different, and an aemp implementation
490 B<must> check and fail when they are identical >>.
491
492 Example of a nonce line (yes, it's random-looking because it is random
493 data):
494
495 2XYhdG7/O6epFa4wuP0ujAEx1rXYWRcOypjUYK7eF6yWAQr7gwIN9m/2+mVvBrTPXz5GJDgfGm9d8QRABAbmAP/s
496
497 =head2 TLS handshake
498
499 I<< If, after the handshake, both sides indicate interest in TLS, then the
500 connection B<must> use TLS, or fail to continue. >>
501
502 Both sides compare their nonces, and the side who sent the lower nonce
503 value ("string" comparison on the raw octet values) becomes the client,
504 and the one with the higher nonce the server.
505
506 =head2 AUTHENTICATION PHASE
507
508 After the greeting is received (and the optional TLS handshake),
509 the authentication phase begins, which consists of sending a single
510 C<;>-separated line with three fixed strings and any number of
511 C<KEY=VALUE> pairs.
512
513 The three fixed strings are:
514
515 =over 4
516
517 =item the authentication method chosen
518
519 This must be one of the methods offered by the other side in the greeting.
520
521 Note that all methods starting with C<tls_> are only valid I<iff> TLS was
522 successfully handshaked (and to be secure the implementation must enforce
523 this).
524
525 The currently supported authentication methods are:
526
527 =over 4
528
529 =item cleartext
530
531 This is simply the shared secret, lowercase-hex-encoded. This method is of
532 course very insecure if TLS is not used (and not completely secure even
533 if TLS is used), which is why this module will accept, but not generate,
534 cleartext auth replies.
535
536 =item hmac_md6_64_256
537
538 This method uses an MD6 HMAC with 64 bit blocksize and 256 bit hash, and
539 requires a shared secret. It is the preferred auth method when a shared
540 secret is available.
541
542 First, the shared secret is hashed with MD6:
543
544 key = MD6 (secret)
545
546 This secret is then used to generate the "local auth reply", by taking
547 the two local greeting lines and the two remote greeting lines (without
548 line endings), appending \012 to all of them, concatenating them and
549 calculating the MD6 HMAC with the key:
550
551 lauth = HMAC_MD6 key, "lgreeting1\012lgreeting2\012rgreeting1\012rgreeting2\012"
552
553 This authentication token is then lowercase-hex-encoded and sent to the
554 other side.
555
556 Then the remote auth reply is generated using the same method, but local
557 and remote greeting lines swapped:
558
559 rauth = HMAC_MD6 key, "rgreeting1\012rgreeting2\012lgreeting1\012lgreeting2\012"
560
561 This is the token that is expected from the other side.
562
563 =item tls_anon
564
565 This type is only valid I<iff> TLS was enabled and the TLS handshake
566 was successful. It has no authentication data, as the server/client
567 certificate was successfully verified.
568
569 This authentication type is somewhat insecure, as it allows a
570 man-in-the-middle attacker to change some of the connection parameters
571 (such as the framing format), although there is no known attack that
572 exploits this in a way that is worse than just denying the service.
573
574 By default, this implementation accepts but never generates this auth
575 reply.
576
577 =item tls_md6_64_256
578
579 This type is only valid I<iff> TLS was enabled and the TLS handshake was
580 successful.
581
582 This authentication type simply calculates:
583
584 lauth = MD6 "rgreeting1\012rgreeting2\012lgreeting1\012lgreeting2\012"
585
586 and lowercase-hex encodes the result and sends it as authentication
587 data. No shared secret is required (authentication is done by TLS). The
588 checksum exists only to make tinkering with the greeting hard.
589
590 =back
591
592 =item the authentication data
593
594 The authentication data itself, usually base64 or hex-encoded data, see
595 above.
596
597 =item the framing protocol chosen
598
599 This must be one of the framing protocols offered by the other side in the
600 greeting. Each side must accept the choice of the other side, and generate
601 packets in the format it chose itself.
602
603 =back
604
605 Example of an authentication reply:
606
607 hmac_md6_64_256;363d5175df38bd9eaddd3f6ca18aa1c0c4aa22f0da245ac638d048398c26b8d3;json
608
609 =head2 DATA PHASE
610
611 After this, packets get exchanged using the chosen framing protocol. It is
612 quite possible that both sides use a different framing protocol.
613
614 =head2 FULL EXAMPLE
615
616 This is an actual protocol dump of a handshake, followed by a single data
617 packet. The greater than/less than lines indicate the direction of the
618 transfer only.
619
620 > aemp;0;anon/57Cs1CggVJjzYaQp13XXg4;tls_md6_64_256,hmac_md6_64_256,tls_anon,cleartext;json,storable;provider=AE-0.8;timeout=12;peeraddr=10.0.0.17:4040
621 > yLgdG1ov/02shVkVQer3wzeuywZK+oraTdEQBmIqWHaegxSGDG4g+HqogLQbvdypFOsoDWJ1Sh4ImV4DMhvUBwTK
622
623 < aemp;0;ruth;tls_md6_64_256,hmac_md6_64_256,tls_anon,cleartext;json,storable;provider=AE-0.8;timeout=12;peeraddr=10.0.0.1:37108
624 < +xMQXP8ElfNmuvEhsmcp+s2wCJOuQAsPxSg3d2Ewhs6gBnJz+ypVdWJ/wAVrXqlIJfLeVS/CBy4gEGkyWHSuVb1L
625
626 > hmac_md6_64_256;5ad913855742ae5a03a5aeb7eafa4c78629de136bed6acd73eea36c9e98df44a;json
627
628 < hmac_md6_64_256;84cd590976f794914c2ca26dac3a207a57a6798b9171289c114de07cf0c20401;json
629 < ["","AnyEvent::MP::_spawn","57Cs1CggVJjzYaQp13XXg4.c","AnyEvent::MP::Global::connect",0,"anon/57Cs1CggVJjzYaQp13XXg4"]
630 ...
631
632 The shared secret in use was C<8ugxrtw6H5tKnfPWfaSr4HGhE8MoJXmzTT1BWq7sLutNcD0IbXprQlZjIbl7MBKoeklG3IEfY9GlJthC0pENzk>.
633
634 =head1 SEE ALSO
635
636 L<AnyEvent::MP>.
637
638 =head1 AUTHOR
639
640 Marc Lehmann <schmorp@schmorp.de>
641 http://home.schmorp.de/
642
643 =cut
644
645 1
646