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OSSL_CMP_VALIDATE_MSG(3SSL) OpenSSL OSSL_CMP_VALIDATE_MSG(3SSL)

NAME

OSSL_CMP_validate_msg, OSSL_CMP_validate_cert_path - functions for verifying CMP message protection

SYNOPSIS

 #include <openssl/cmp.h>
 int OSSL_CMP_validate_msg(OSSL_CMP_CTX *ctx, OSSL_CMP_MSG *msg);
 int OSSL_CMP_validate_cert_path(const OSSL_CMP_CTX *ctx,
                                 X509_STORE *trusted_store, X509 *cert);

DESCRIPTION

This is the API for validating the protection of CMP messages, which includes validating CMP message sender certificates and their paths while optionally checking the revocation status of the certificates(s).

OSSL_CMP_validate_msg() validates the protection of the given msg, which must be signature-based or using password-based MAC (PBM). In the former case a suitable trust anchor must be given in the CMP context ctx, and in the latter case the matching secret must have been set there using OSSL_CMP_CTX_set1_secretValue(3).

In case of signature algorithm, the certificate to use for the signature check is preferably the one provided by a call to OSSL_CMP_CTX_set1_srvCert(3). If no such sender cert has been pinned then candidate sender certificates are taken from the list of certificates received in the msg extraCerts, then any certificates provided before via OSSL_CMP_CTX_set1_untrusted(3), and then all trusted certificates provided via OSSL_CMP_CTX_set0_trusted(3). A candidate certificate is acceptable only if it is currently valid (or the trust store contains a verification callback that overrides the verdict that the certificate is expired or not yet valid), its subject DN matches the msg sender DN (as far as present), and its subject key identifier is present and matches the senderKID (as far as the latter is present). Each acceptable cert is tried in the given order to see if the message signature check succeeds and the cert and its path can be verified using any trust store set via OSSL_CMP_CTX_set0_trusted(3).

If the option OSSL_CMP_OPT_PERMIT_TA_IN_EXTRACERTS_FOR_IR was set by calling OSSL_CMP_CTX_set_option(3), for an Initialization Response (IP) message any self-issued certificate from the msg extraCerts field may be used as a trust anchor for the path verification of an 'acceptable' cert if it can be used also to validate the issued certificate returned in the IP message. This is according to TS 33.310 [Network Domain Security (NDS); Authentication Framework (AF)] document specified by the The 3rd Generation Partnership Project (3GPP). Note that using this option is dangerous as the certificate obtained this way has not been authenticated (at least not at CMP level). Taking it over as a trust anchor implements trust-on-first-use (TOFU).

Any cert that has been found as described above is cached and tried first when validating the signatures of subsequent messages in the same transaction.

OSSL_CMP_validate_cert_path() attempts to validate the given certificate and its path using the given store of trusted certs (possibly including CRLs and a cert verification callback) and non-trusted intermediate certs from the ctx.

NOTES

CMP is defined in RFC 4210 (and CRMF in RFC 4211).

RETURN VALUES

OSSL_CMP_validate_msg() and OSSL_CMP_validate_cert_path() return 1 on success, 0 on error or validation failed.

SEE ALSO

OSSL_CMP_CTX_new(3), OSSL_CMP_exec_certreq(3), OSSL_CMP_CTX_set1_secretValue(3), OSSL_CMP_CTX_set1_srvCert(3), OSSL_CMP_CTX_set1_untrusted(3), OSSL_CMP_CTX_set0_trusted(3)

HISTORY

The OpenSSL CMP support was added in OpenSSL 3.0.

COPYRIGHT

Copyright 2007-2024 The OpenSSL Project Authors. All Rights Reserved.

Licensed under the Apache License 2.0 (the "License"). You may not use this file except in compliance with the License. You can obtain a copy in the file LICENSE in the source distribution or at <https://www.openssl.org/source/license.html>.

2024-09-03 3.3.2