The check_key_level() function currently fails when the public key
cannot be extracted from the certificate because its algorithm is not
supported. However, the public key is not needed for the last
certificate in the chain.
This change moves the check for level 0 before the check for a
non-NULL public key.
For background, this is the TPM 1.2 endorsement key certificate.
I.e., this is a real application with millions of certificates issued.
The key is an RSA-2048 key.
The TCG (for a while) specified
Public Key Algorithm: rsaesOaep
rather than the commonly used
Public Key Algorithm: rsaEncryption
because the key is an encryption key rather than a signing key.
The X509 certificate parser fails to get the public key.
Reviewed-by: Viktor Dukhovni <viktor@openssl.org>
Reviewed-by: Richard Levitte <levitte@openssl.org>
(Merged from https://github.com/openssl/openssl/pull/7906)
EVP_PKEY *pkey = X509_get0_pubkey(cert);
int level = ctx->param->auth_level;
+ /*
+ * At security level zero, return without checking for a supported public
+ * key type. Some engines support key types not understood outside the
+ * engine, and we only need to understand the key when enforcing a security
+ * floor.
+ */
+ if (level <= 0)
+ return 1;
+
/* Unsupported or malformed keys are not secure */
if (pkey == NULL)
return 0;
- if (level <= 0)
- return 1;
if (level > NUM_AUTH_LEVELS)
level = NUM_AUTH_LEVELS;