We have added support for ECH to curl. It can use HTTPS RRs published in the DNS if curl uses DoH, or else can accept the relevant ECHConfigList values from the command line. This works with OpenSSL, WolfSSL or boringssl as the TLS provider.
This feature is EXPERIMENTAL. DO NOT USE IN PRODUCTION.
This should however provide enough of a proof-of-concept to prompt an informed discussion about a good path forward for ECH support in curl.
To build our ECH-enabled OpenSSL fork:
cd $HOME/code
git clone https://github.com/defo-project/openssl
cd openssl
./config --libdir=lib --prefix=$HOME/code/openssl-local-inst
...stuff...
make -j8
...stuff (maybe go for coffee)...
make install_sw
...a little bit of stuff...
To build curl ECH-enabled, making use of the above:
cd $HOME/code
git clone https://github.com/curl/curl
cd curl
autoreconf -fi
LDFLAGS="-Wl,-rpath,$HOME/code/openssl-local-inst/lib/" ./configure --with-ssl=$HOME/code/openssl-local-inst --enable-ech --enable-httpsrr
...lots of output...
WARNING: ECH HTTPSRR enabled but marked EXPERIMENTAL...
make
...lots more output...
If you do not get that WARNING at the end of the configure
command, then
ECH is not enabled, so go back some steps and re-do whatever needs re-doing:-)
If you want to debug curl then you should add --enable-debug
to the
configure
command.
In a recent (2024-05-20) build on one machine, configure failed to find the
ECH-enabled SSL library, apparently due to the existence of
$HOME/code/openssl-local-inst/lib/pkgconfig
as a directory containing
various settings. Deleting that directory worked around the problem but may
not be the best solution.
Curl supports using DoH for A/AAAA lookups so it was relatively easy to add retrieval of HTTPS RRs in that situation. To use ECH and DoH together:
cd $HOME/code/curl
LD_LIBRARY_PATH=$HOME/code/openssl ./src/curl --ech true --doh-url https://one.one.one.one/dns-query https://defo.ie/ech-check.php
...
SSL_ECH_STATUS: success <img src="greentick-small.png" alt="good" /> <br/>
...
The output snippet above is within the HTML for the webpage, when things work.
The above works for these test sites:
https://defo.ie/ech-check.php
https://draft-13.esni.defo.ie:8413/stats
https://draft-13.esni.defo.ie:8414/stats
https://crypto.cloudflare.com/cdn-cgi/trace
https://tls-ech.dev
The list above has 4 different server technologies, implemented by 3 different parties, and includes a case (the port 8414 server) where HelloRetryRequest (HRR) is forced.
We currently support the following new curl command line arguments/options:
--ech <config>
- the config
value can be one of:
false
says to not attempt ECHtrue
says to attempt ECH, if possiblegrease
if attempting ECH is not possible, then send a GREASE ECH extensionhard
hard-fail the connection if ECH cannot be attemptedecl:<b64value>
a base64 encoded ECHConfigList, rather than one accessed from the DNSpn:<name>
over-ride the public_name
from an ECHConfigListNote that in the above "attempt ECH" means the client emitting a TLS ClientHello with a "real" ECH extension, but that does not mean that the relevant server can succeed in decrypting, as things can fail for other reasons.
To supply the ECHConfigList on the command line, you might need a bit of cut-and-paste, e.g.:
dig +short https defo.ie
1 . ipv4hint=213.108.108.101 ech=AED+DQA8PAAgACD8WhlS7VwEt5bf3lekhHvXrQBGDrZh03n/LsNtAodbUAAEAAEAAQANY292ZXIuZGVmby5pZQAA ipv6hint=2a00:c6c0:0:116:5::10
Then paste the base64 encoded ECHConfigList onto the curl command line:
LD_LIBRARY_PATH=$HOME/code/openssl ./src/curl --ech ecl:AED+DQA8PAAgACD8WhlS7VwEt5bf3lekhHvXrQBGDrZh03n/LsNtAodbUAAEAAEAAQANY292ZXIuZGVmby5pZQAA https://defo.ie/ech-check.php
...
SSL_ECH_STATUS: success <img src="greentick-small.png" alt="good" /> <br/>
...
The output snippet above is within the HTML for the webpage.
If you paste in the wrong ECHConfigList (it changes hourly for defo.ie
) you
should get an error like this:
LD_LIBRARY_PATH=$HOME/code/openssl ./src/curl -vvv --ech ecl:AED+DQA8yAAgACDRMQo+qYNsNRNj+vfuQfFIkrrUFmM4vogucxKj/4nzYgAEAAEAAQANY292ZXIuZGVmby5pZQAA https://defo.ie/ech-check.php
...
* OpenSSL/3.3.0: error:0A00054B:SSL routines::ech required
...
There is a reason to want this command line option - for use before publishing an ECHConfigList in the DNS as per the Internet-draft A well-known URI for publishing ECHConfigList values.
If you do use a wrong ECHConfigList value, then the server might return a
good value, via the retry_configs
mechanism. You can see that value in
the verbose output, e.g.:
LD_LIBRARY_PATH=$HOME/code/openssl ./src/curl -vvv --ech ecl:AED+DQA8yAAgACDRMQo+qYNsNRNj+vfuQfFIkrrUFmM4vogucxKj/4nzYgAEAAEAAQANY292ZXIuZGVmby5pZQAA https://defo.ie/ech-check.php
...
* ECH: retry_configs AQD+DQA8DAAgACBvYqJy+Hgk33wh/ZLBzKSPgwxeop7gvojQzfASq7zeZQAEAAEAAQANY292ZXIuZGVmby5pZQAA/g0APEMAIAAgXkT5r4cYs8z19q5rdittyIX8gfQ3ENW4wj1fVoiJZBoABAABAAEADWNvdmVyLmRlZm8uaWUAAP4NADw2ACAAINXSE9EdXzEQIJZA7vpwCIQsWqsFohZARXChgPsnfI1kAAQAAQABAA1jb3Zlci5kZWZvLmllAAD+DQA8cQAgACASeiD5F+UoSnVoHvA2l1EifUVMFtbVZ76xwDqmMPraHQAEAAEAAQANY292ZXIuZGVmby5pZQAA
* ECH: retry_configs for defo.ie from cover.defo.ie, 319
...
At that point, you could copy the base64 encoded value above and try again. For now, this only works for the OpenSSL and boringssl builds.
Curl has various ways to configure default settings, e.g. in $HOME/.curlrc
,
so one can set the DoH URL and enable ECH that way:
cat ~/.curlrc
doh-url=https://one.one.one.one/dns-query
silent
ech=true
Note that when you use the system's curl command (rather than our ECH-enabled
build), it is liable to warn that ech
is an unknown option. If that is an
issue (e.g. if some script re-directs stdout and stderr somewhere) then adding
the silent
line above seems to be a good enough fix. (Though of
course, yet another script could depend on non-silent behavior, so you may have
to figure out what you prefer yourself.) That seems to have changed with the
latest build, previously silent=TRUE
was what I used in ~/.curlrc
but
now that seems to cause a problem, so that the following line(s) are ignored.
If you want to always use our OpenSSL build you can set LD_LIBRARY_PATH
in the environment:
export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=$HOME/code/openssl
When you do the above, there can be a mismatch between OpenSSL versions
for applications that check that. A git push
for example fails so you
should unset LD_LIBRARY_PATH
before doing that or use a different shell.
git push
OpenSSL version mismatch. Built against 30000080, you have 30200000
...
With all that setup as above the command line gets simpler:
./src/curl https://defo.ie/ech-check.php
...
SSL_ECH_STATUS: success <img src="greentick-small.png" alt="good" /> <br/>
...
The --ech true
option is opportunistic, so tries to do ECH but does not fail if
the client for example cannot find any ECHConfig values. The --ech hard
option hard-fails if there is no ECHConfig found in DNS, so for now, that is not
a good option to set as a default. Once ECH has really been attempted by
the client, if decryption on the server side fails, then curl fails.
Code changes are #ifdef
protected via USE_ECH
or USE_HTTPSRR
:
USE_HTTPSRR
is used for HTTPS RR retrieval code that could be generically
used should non-ECH uses for HTTPS RRs be identified, e.g. use of ALPN values
or IP address hints.
USE_ECH
protects ECH specific code.
There are various obvious code blocks for handling the new command line arguments which are not described here, but should be fairly clear.
As shown in the configure
usage above, there are configure.ac
changes
that allow separately dis/enabling USE_HTTPSRR
and USE_ECH
. If USE_ECH
is enabled, then USE_HTTPSRR
is forced. In both cases USE_DOH
is required. (There may be some configuration conflicts available for the
determined:-)
The main functional change, as you would expect, is in lib/vtls/openssl.c
where an ECHConfig, if available from command line or DNS cache, is fed into
the OpenSSL library via the new APIs implemented in our OpenSSL fork for that
purpose. This code also implements the opportunistic (--ech true
) or hard-fail
(--ech hard
) logic.
Other than that, the main additions are in lib/doh.c
where we re-use dohprobe()
to retrieve an HTTPS RR value for the target
domain. If such a value is found, that is stored using a new store_https()
function in a new field in the dohentry
structure.
The qname for the DoH query is modified if the port number is not 443, as defined in the SVCB specification.
When the DoH process has worked, Curl_doh_is_resolved()
now also returns
the relevant HTTPS RR value data in the Curl_dns_entry
structure.
That is later accessed when the TLS session is being established, if ECH is
enabled (from lib/vtls/openssl.c
as described above).
Things that need fixing, but that can probably be ignored for the moment:
alpn=
value found in an HTTPS
RR, passing that on to OpenSSL for use as the "inner" ALPN value, but have
yet to do that.Current limitations (more interesting than the above):
Only the first HTTPS RR value retrieved is actually processed as described above, that could be extended in future, though picking the "right" HTTPS RR could be non-trivial if multiple RRs are published - matching IP address hints versus A/AAAA values might be a good basis for that. Last I checked though, browsers supporting ECH did not handle multiple HTTPS RRs well, though that needs re-checking as it has been a while.
It is unclear how one should handle any IP address hints found in an HTTPS RR. It may be that a bit of consideration of how "multi-CDN" deployments might emerge would provide good answers there, but for now, it is not clear how best curl might handle those values when present in the DNS.
The SVCB/HTTPS RR specification supports a new "CNAME at apex" indirection ("aliasMode") - the current code takes no account of that at all. One could envisage implementing the equivalent of following CNAMEs in such cases, but it is not clear if that'd be a good plan. (As of now, chrome browsers do not seem to have any support for that "aliasMode" and we have not checked Firefox for that recently.)
We have not investigated what related changes or additions might be needed for applications using libcurl, as opposed to use of curl as a command line tool.
We have not yet implemented tests as part of the usual curl test harness as
doing so would seem to require re-implementing an ECH-enabled server as part
of the curl test harness. For now, we have a ./tests/ech_test.sh
script
that attempts ECH with various test servers and with many combinations of the
allowed command line options. While that is a useful test and has find issues,
it is not comprehensive and we are not (as yet) sure what would be the right
level of coverage. When running that script you should not have a
$HOME/.curlrc
file that affects ECH or some of the negative tests could
produce spurious failures.
To build with cmake, assuming our ECH-enabled OpenSSL is as before:
cd $HOME/code
git clone https://github.com/curl/curl
cd curl
mkdir build
cd build
cmake -DOPENSSL_ROOT_DIR=$HOME/code/openssl -DUSE_ECH=1 -DUSE_HTTPSRR=1 ..
...
make
...
[100%] Built target curl
The binary produced by the cmake build does not need any ECH-specific
LD_LIBRARY_PATH
setting.
BoringSSL is also supported by curl and also supports ECH, so to build with that, instead of our ECH-enabled OpenSSL:
cd $HOME/code
git clone https://boringssl.googlesource.com/boringssl
cd boringssl
cmake -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX:PATH=$HOME/code/boringssl/inst -DBUILD_SHARED_LIBS=1
make
...
make install
Then:
cd $HOME/code
git clone https://github.com/curl/curl
cd curl
autoreconf -fi
LDFLAGS="-Wl,-rpath,$HOME/code/boringssl/inst/lib" ./configure --with-ssl=$HOME/code/boringssl/inst --enable-ech --enable-httpsrr
...lots of output...
WARNING: ECH HTTPSRR enabled but marked EXPERIMENTAL. Use with caution!
make
The boringssl APIs are fairly similar to those in our ECH-enabled OpenSSL
fork, so code changes are also in lib/vtls/openssl.c
, protected
via #ifdef OPENSSL_IS_BORINGSSL
and are mostly obvious API variations.
The boringssl APIs however do not support the --ech pn:
command line
variant as of now.
WolfSSL also supports ECH and can be used by curl, so here's how:
cd $HOME/code
git clone https://github.com/wolfSSL/wolfssl
cd wolfssl
./autogen.sh
./configure --prefix=$HOME/code/wolfssl/inst --enable-ech --enable-debug --enable-opensslextra
make
make install
The install prefix (inst
) in the above causes WolfSSL to be installed there
and we seem to need that for the curl configure command to work out. The
--enable-opensslextra
turns out (after much faffing about;-) to be
important or else we get build problems with curl below.
cd $HOME/code
git clone https://github.com/curl/curl
cd curl
autoreconf -fi
./configure --with-wolfssl=$HOME/code/wolfssl/inst --enable-ech --enable-httpsrr
make
There are some known issues with the ECH implementation in WolfSSL:
There are what seem like oddball differences:
$HOME/.curlrc
can use 1.1.1.1
for OpenSSL but has to be
one.one.one.one
for WolfSSL. The latter works for both, so OK, we us that.defo.ie
, whereas the system and OpenSSL ones do. We can
ignore that for our purposes via --insecure
/-k
but would need to fix
for a real setup. (Browsers do like those certificates though.)Then there are some functional code changes:
configure.ac
to check if WolfSSL has ECH or notlib/vtls/wolfssl.c
mirroring what's done in the
OpenSSL equivalent above.--ech false
or the --ech pn:
command line
argument.The lack of support for --ech false
is because wolfSSL has decided to
always at least GREASE if built to support ECH. In other words, GREASE is
a compile time choice for wolfSSL, but a runtime choice for OpenSSL or
boringssl. (Both are reasonable.)
All of the above only applies if DoH is being used. There should be a use-case for ECH when DoH is not used by curl - if a system stub resolver supports DoT or DoH, then, considering only ECH and the network threat model, it would make sense for curl to support ECH without curl itself using DoH. The author for example uses a combination of stubby+unbound as the system resolver listening on localhost:53, so would fit this use-case. That said, it is unclear if this is a niche that is worth trying to address. (The author is just as happy to let curl use DoH to talk to the same public recursive that stubby might use:-)
Assuming for the moment this is a use-case we would like to support, then if
DoH is not being used by curl, it is not clear at this time how to provide
support for ECH. One option would seem to be to extend the c-ares
library
to support HTTPS RRs, but in that case it is not now clear whether such
changes would be attractive to the c-ares
maintainers, nor whether the
"tag=value" extensibility inherent in the HTTPS/SVCB specification is a good
match for the c-ares
approach of defining structures specific to decoded
answers for each supported RRtype. We are also not sure how many downstream
curl deployments actually make use of the c-ares
library, which would
affect the utility of such changes. Another option might be to consider using
some other generic DNS library that does support HTTPS RRs, but it is unclear
if such a library could or would be used by all or almost all curl builds and
downstream releases of curl.
Our current conclusion is that doing the above is likely best left until we have some experience with the "using DoH" approach, so we are going to punt on this for now.
Just a note to self as remembering this is a nuisance:
LD_LIBRARY_PATH=$HOME/code/openssl:./lib/.libs gdb ./src/.libs/curl
It can be useful to be able to run against a localhost OpenSSL s_server
for testing. We have published instructions for such
localhost tests
in another repository. Once you have that set up, you can start a server
and then run curl against that:
cd $HOME/code/ech-dev-utils
./scripts/echsvr.sh -d
...
The echsvr.sh
script supports many ECH-related options. Use echsvr.sh -h
for details.
In another window:
cd $HOME/code/curl/
./src/curl -vvv --insecure --connect-to foo.example.com:8443:localhost:8443 --ech ecl:AD7+DQA6uwAgACBix2B78sX+EQhEbxMspDOc8Z3xVS5aQpYP0Cxpc2AWPAAEAAEAAQALZXhhbXBsZS5jb20AAA==
retry_configs
not supported so far...As of now we have not added support for using retry_config
handling in the
application - for a command line tool, one can just use dig
(or kdig
)
to get the HTTPS RR and pass the ECHConfigList from that on the command line,
if needed, or one can access the value from command line output in verbose more
and then re-use that in another invocation.
Both our OpenSSL fork and boringssl have APIs for both controlling GREASE and
accessing and logging retry_configs
, it seems WolfSSL has neither.