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README.md | vor 2 Monaten | |
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This demo example will run an example TLS 1.3 client using wolfSSL, using an IoT-SAFE applet supporting the IoT.05-v1-IoT standard.
The TLS 1.3 configuration used in this example will use:
No PSK authentication, early data, session resumption are used in this demo.
The below preprocessor macros can be found in the client-tls13.c
.
The applet that has been tested with this demo has the current configuration:
Key slot | Name | Description |
---|---|---|
0x01 | PRIVKEY_ID |
pre-provisioned with the client ECC private key |
0x02 | CRT_CLIENT_FILE_ID |
pre-provisioned with the client ECC public key certificate |
0x03 | CRT_SERVER_FILE_ID |
pre-provisioned with the server ECC public key certificate |
0x04 | ECDH_KEYPAIR_ID |
used to generate the ECDH key pair that will be used during the TLS session |
0x05 | PEER_PUBKEY_ID |
used to store the ECDH public key received from the peer during the TLS session |
The following file is used to read the client's certificate and will be used to authenticate the client:
File Slot | Name | Description |
---|---|---|
0x02 | CRT_CLIENT_FILE_ID |
pre-provisioned with the client ECC public key certificate |
The following file is used to read the server's certificate and will be used to authenticate the server by trusting the server certificate (trust here means no CA chain verification is performed, only comparing the server certificate sent from the server with the one stored in the IoT-SAFE):
File Slot | Name | Description |
---|---|---|
0x03 | CRT_SERVER_FILE_ID |
pre-provisioned with the server ECC public key certificate |
How the applet configuration (such as putting the client key pair with the corresponding client certificate and the server certificate the client can trust) is performed during its initial and on-field lifetime depends on the infrastructure and is out-of-scope of this demo.
The below code explanations can be found in the client-tls13.c
.
In this demo, the client is the IoT-SAFE capable endpoint.
First, it creates a wolfSSL context ctx
with TLS 1.3.
wolfSSL_CTX_new(wolfTLSv1_3_client_method());
In order to activate IoT-SAFE support in this context, the following function is called:
wolfSSL_CTX_iotsafe_enable(ctx);
Extracting the client and server certificate can be done by the following functions:
wolfIoTSafe_GetCert(
CRT_CLIENT_FILE_ID,
cert_buffer,
sizeof(cert_buffer));
wolfIoTSafe_GetCert(
CRT_SERVER_FILE_ID,
cert_buffer,
sizeof(cert_buffer));
in which the extracted certificate inside the cer_buffer
can be later loaded to the ctx
.
Additionally, after the TLS session ssl
creation, shown below:
ssl = wolfSSL_new(ctx);
the client associates the pre-provisioned keys and the available slots in the IoT-SAFE applet to the current session:
wolfSSL_iotsafe_on(ssl, PRIVKEY_ID, ECDH_KEYPAIR_ID, PEER_PUBKEY_ID, PEER_CERT_ID);
First, user needs to build wolfSSL with the following options:
./configure CFLAGS="-DWOLFSSL_TRUST_PEER_CERT" --enable-tls13 --enable-pkcallbacks --enable-debug --enable-iotsafe --enable-hkdf
Additionally, user can pass CFLAGS="-DDEBUG_WOLFSSL -DWOLFSSL_DEBUG_TLS -DDEBUG_IOTSAFE"
if more debugging information is to be used. This can clutter the demo stdout more than --enable-debug
does, but this is very useful to see the overall TLS 1.3 handshaking process with IoT-SAFE.
Hence, the full wolfSSL build for the demo is:
./configure CFLAGS="-DWOLFSSL_TRUST_PEER_CERT -DDEBUG_WOLFSSL -DWOLFSSL_DEBUG_TLS -DDEBUG_IOTSAFE" --enable-tls13 --enable-pkcallbacks --enable-debug --enable-iotsafe
-DWOLFSSL_TRUST_PEER_CERT
is needed for wolfSSL_CTX_trust_peer_buffer
in IDE/iotsafe-raspberrypi/client-tls13.c
After building wolfSSL, from this directory, run make
and a help usage will be shown.
Run below to build a minimal demo:
make all
Run below to enable printing UART IO:
make all ENABLE_DEBUG_UART_IO_EXTRA=on|off
Run the built ./main.bin
to print the help usage.
An example to run the demo connecting to a server:
./main.bin -ip <ipaddress> -h <full-hostname> -p <port> -t 25 -d /dev/ttyUSB0|/dev/tty/ACM0