Go library for DANE TLSA authentication
- Go
- Go dns package from https://github.com/miekg/dns
Formatted documentation for this module can be found at:
https://pkg.go.dev/github.com/shuque/dane?tab=doc
Package dane provides a set of functions to perform DANE authentication of a TLS server, with fall back to PKIX authentication if no DANE TLSA records exist for the server. DANE is a protocol that employs DNSSEC signed records ("TLSA") to authenticate X.509 certificates used in TLS and other protocols. See RFC 6698 for details.
The dane.Config structure holds all the configured input parameters for DANE authentication, including the server's name, address & port, and the TLSA record set data. A new dane.Config structure has to be instantiated for each DANE TLS server that needs to be authenticated.
The package includes functions that will perform secure lookup of TLSA records and address records via a validating DNS resolver: GetTLSA() and GetAddresses(). Alternatively, if the calling application has obtained the TLSA record data by itself, it can populate the dane.Config's TLSA structure itself.
The use of GetTLSA() and GetAddresses() requires the use of a validating DNS resolver that sets the AD bit on authenticated responses. The GetResolver() function in this package, by default uses the set of resolvers defined in /etc/resolv.conf. This can be overridden by supplying a custom resolv.conf file, or by directly initializing a Resolver structure and placing it in the dane.Config. To be secure, it is important that system the code is running on has a secure connection to the validating resolver. (A future version of this library may perform stub DNSSEC validation itself, in which case it would only need to be able to communicate with a DNSSEC aware resolver, and not require a secure transport connection to it.)
The functions DialTLS() or DialStartTLS() take a dane.Config instance, connect to the server, perform DANE authentication, and return a TLS connection handle for subsequent use. DialStartTLS() will additionally perform an application specific STARTTLS negotiation first. STARTTLS is supported for the SMTP, POP3, IMAP, and XMPP applications by calling the Appname and Servicename methods on the Config structure.
If no secure DANE TLSA records are found, or if the resolver doesn't validate, this package will fallback to normal PKIX authentication. Calling NoPKIXverify() on the Config structure will prevent this and force a requirement for DANE authentication.
Per current spec (RFC 7671, Section 5.1), this library does not perform certificate name checks for DANE-EE mode TLSA records, but this can be overridden with the DaneEEname option. For Web applications it is sensible to set the DaneEEname option to protect against Unknown Keyshare Attacks as described in https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-barnes-dane-uks-00 .
Also, per RFC 7672, Section 3.1.3, for SMTP STARTTLS the library ignores PKIX-* mode TLSA records, since they are not recommended for use. This can also be overridden by setting the SMTPAnyMode option.
After calling DialTLSA() or DialStartTLSA(), the dane.Config structure is populated with additional diagnostic information, such as DANE and PKIX authentication status, the verified certificate chains, and the verification status of each DANE TLSA record processed.
If dane.Config.DiagMode is set to true, then DialTLSA() and DialStartTLSA() will return a working TLS connection handle even if server authentication fails (rather than an error), but will populate the dane.Config's DiagError member with the appropriate error instead.
The basic steps in summary form are:
import (
...
"github.com/shuque/dane"
)
// replace this with the name and port for a valid DANE TLS server
hostname := "www.example.com"
port := 443
resolver, err := dane.GetResolver()
tlsa, err := dane.GetTLSA(resolver, hostname, port)
iplist, err := dane.GetAddresses(resolver, hostname, true)
for _, ip := range iplist {
daneconfig := dane.NewConfig(hostname, ip, 443)
daneconfig.SetTLSA(tlsa)
conn, err := dane.DialTLS(daneconfig)
if err != nil {
fmt.Printf("Result: FAILED: %s\n", err.Error())
continue
}
if daneconfig.Okdane {
fmt.Printf("Result: DANE OK\n")
} else if daneconfig.Okpkix {
fmt.Printf("Result: PKIX OK\n")
} else {
fmt.Printf("Result: FAILED\n")
}
//
// do some stuff with the obtained TLS connection here
//
conn.Close()
}
The ConnectByName(), ConnectByNameAsync(), and ConnectByNameAsync2() functions are simpler all-in-one functions that take a hostname and port argument, and then lookup up TLSA records, connect to the first address associated with the hostname that results in an authenticated connection, and returns the associated TLS connection object.
GetHttpClient() returns a HTTP client structure (net/http.Client) configured to do DANE authentication of a HTTPS server. The "pkixfallback" boolean argument specifies whether or not to fallback to PKIX authentication if there are no secure TLSA records published for the server.