History log of /freebsd-current/sys/rpc/rpcsec_tls/rpctlscd.x
Revision Date Author Comments
# 71625ec9 16-Aug-2023 Warner Losh <imp@FreeBSD.org>

sys: Remove $FreeBSD$: one-line .c comment pattern

Remove /^/[*/]\s*\$FreeBSD\$.*\n/


# 665b1365 21-Dec-2020 Rick Macklem <rmacklem@FreeBSD.org>

Add a new "tlscertname" NFS mount option.

When using NFS-over-TLS, an NFS client can optionally provide an X.509
certificate to the server during the TLS handshake. For some situations,
such as different NFS servers or different certificates being mapped
to different user credentials on the NFS server, there may be a need
for different mounts to provide different certificates.

This new mount option called "tlscertname" may be used to specify a
non-default certificate be provided. This alernate certificate will
be stored in /etc/rpc.tlsclntd in a file with a name based on what is
provided by this mount option.


# ab0c29af 21-Aug-2020 Rick Macklem <rmacklem@FreeBSD.org>

Add TLS support to the kernel RPC.

An internet draft titled "Towards Remote Procedure Call Encryption By Default"
describes how TLS is to be used for Sun RPC, with NFS as an intended use case.
This patch adds client and server support for this to the kernel RPC,
using KERN_TLS and upcalls to daemons for the handshake, peer reset and
other non-application data record cases.

The upcalls to the daemons use three fields to uniquely identify the
TCP connection. They are the time.tv_sec, time.tv_usec of the connection
establshment, plus a 64bit sequence number. The time fields avoid problems
with re-use of the sequence number after a daemon restart.
For the server side, once a Null RPC with AUTH_TLS is received, kernel
reception on the socket is blocked and an upcall to the rpctlssd(8) daemon
is done to perform the TLS handshake. Upon completion, the completion
status of the handshake is stored in xp_tls as flag bits and the reply to
the Null RPC is sent.
For the client, if CLSET_TLS has been set, a new TCP connection will
send the Null RPC with AUTH_TLS to initiate the handshake. The client
kernel RPC code will then block kernel I/O on the socket and do an upcall
to the rpctlscd(8) daemon to perform the handshake.
If the upcall is successful, ct_rcvstate will be maintained to indicate
if/when an upcall is being done.

If non-application data records are received, the code does an upcall to
the appropriate daemon, which will do a SSL_read() of 0 length to handle
the record(s).

When the socket is being shut down, upcalls are done to the daemons, so
that they can perform SSL_shutdown() calls to perform the "peer reset".

The rpctlssd(8) and rpctlscd(8) daemons require a patched version of the
openssl library and, as such, will not be committed to head at this time.

Although the changes done by this patch are fairly numerous, there should
be no semantics change to the kernel RPC at this time.
A future commit to the NFS code will optionally enable use of TLS for NFS.