True, the current handling of the extra bytes in parseKey() and decode()
are kind of opposite, one does not allow any extra bytes but the other
ignores all. The trailing bytes may look harmless but simply ignores it
may open up something unexpected.
Given that this is key related class, I think it's important to do
reasonable validation even though we currently do not use these trailing
bytes. It'd also be good if the handling can be consistent regardless of
the call path.
Thanks,
Valerie
On 5/18/2020 9:36 PM, Weijun Wang wrote:
On May 19, 2020, at 1:41 AM, Valerie Peng <valerie.p...@oracle.com> wrote:
Hi Max,
I saw in the bug description that handling and parsing of the public key will
be resolved in a separate enhancement which is fine with me.
In addition to relaxing the PKCS8 version check to accept 1, the current webrev
does not check for the trailing bytes and its validity. Perhaps we should
consider adding necessary checks to ensure spec conformance? Perhaps some
utility method like: (This includes basic checks plus checks for multiple
attributes and version 1 w/ public key. )
private static void checkTrailingBytes(DerInputStream derIn, int version)
throws IOException {
boolean hasAttributes = false;
boolean hasPublicKey = false;
while (derIn.available () != 0) {
// check for OPTIONAL attributes and/or publicKey
DerValue tmp = derIn.getDerValue();
if (tmp.isContextSpecific((byte)0) && !hasAttributes) {
// OPTIONAL attributes not supported yet
// discard for now and move on
hasAttributes = true;
} else if (version == V2 && tmp.isContextSpecific((byte)1) &&
!hasPublicKey) {
// OPTIONAL v2 public key not supported yet
// discard for now and move on
hasPublicKey = true;
} else {
throw new IOException ("illegal encoding in private key");
}
}
}
I wonder if this is necessary. The extra bytes are quite harmless, and we
didn't check it in decode().
Besides the encoding parsing check above, maybe V1, V2 can be made private
static?
OK.
I noticed that the PKCS8Key class has a block of code under the comments "Try again using
JDK1.1-style...", however the provider property "PrivateKey.PKCS#8.<alg>" seems long
gone? Without these property, this block of code seems useless and probably should be cleaned up as well.
Yes.
As for the test, the existing comments for the EXPECTED bytes are off and plain misleading. Could you please
fix them or at least remove them. For example, the comment of "integer 3" should be associated with
"0x02, 0x01, 0x03," bytes instead of "0x01, 0x02, 0x02,". In the updated test,
NEW_ENCODED_KEY_INTS is PKCS8 v1 key and NEW_ENCODED_KEY_INTS_2 is PKCS8 v2 key w/ public key. Since the
version value is always at index 4, we can either clone the existing bytes or directly override the version
value in NEW_ENCODED_KEY_INTS or NEW_ENCODED_KEY_INTS_2 to add additional negative tests, e.g. encoding w/
the version value 2 (anything besides the allowed 0 and 1), version value 0 w/ trailing public key. It'd be
nice to test version 1 w/ trailing bytes w/ invalid tag value as well.
If you still want checkTrailingBytes, then yes.
Thanks,
Max
Thanks,
Valerie
On 5/13/2020 5:16 PM, Valerie Peng wrote:
I will take a look.
Valerie
On 5/8/2020 3:39 AM, Weijun Wang wrote:
Found an existing test I can update. Webrev updated at
http://cr.openjdk.java.net/~weijun/8244565/webrev.01/
Thanks,
Max
On May 8, 2020, at 5:41 PM, Weijun Wang <weijun.w...@oracle.com> wrote:
Please take a review at
http://cr.openjdk.java.net/~weijun/8244565/webrev.00/
Now we accepts a PKCS8 file with version being 0 or 1. The publicKey and
attributes are still not parsed.
I also take this chance to make some format change.
There is no regression test and I'll add one. I can generate a PKCS8 key and
then modify the version from 0 to 1 and try to read it. Or I can find a PKCS8
generated by some other tool and embed it the test to read it. Please advise
which is better.
Thanks,
Max