mailinabox/management/ssl_certificates.py

384 lines
15 KiB
Python

# Utilities for installing and selecting SSL certificates.
import os, os.path, re, shutil
from utils import shell, safe_domain_name
def get_ssl_certificates(env):
# Scan all of the installed SSL certificates and map every domain
# that the certificates are good for to the best certificate for
# the domain.
from cryptography.hazmat.primitives.asymmetric.rsa import RSAPrivateKey
from cryptography.x509 import Certificate
# The certificates are all stored here:
ssl_root = os.path.join(env["STORAGE_ROOT"], 'ssl')
# List all of the files in the SSL directory and one level deep.
def get_file_list():
for fn in os.listdir(ssl_root):
fn = os.path.join(ssl_root, fn)
if os.path.isfile(fn):
yield fn
elif os.path.isdir(fn):
for fn1 in os.listdir(fn):
fn1 = os.path.join(fn, fn1)
if os.path.isfile(fn1):
yield fn1
# Remember stuff.
private_keys = { }
certificates = [ ]
# Scan each of the files to find private keys and certificates.
# We must load all of the private keys first before processing
# certificates so that we can check that we have a private key
# available before using a certificate.
for fn in get_file_list():
try:
pem = load_pem(load_cert_chain(fn)[0])
except ValueError:
# Not a valid PEM format for a PEM type we care about.
continue
# Remember where we got this object.
pem._filename = fn
# Is it a private key?
if isinstance(pem, RSAPrivateKey):
private_keys[pem.public_key().public_numbers()] = pem
# Is it a certificate?
if isinstance(pem, Certificate):
certificates.append(pem)
# Process the certificates.
domains = { }
for cert in certificates:
# What domains is this certificate good for?
cert_domains, primary_domain = get_certificate_domains(cert)
cert._primary_domain = primary_domain
# Is there a private key file for this certificate?
private_key = private_keys.get(cert.public_key().public_numbers())
if not private_key:
continue
cert._private_key = private_key
# Add this cert to the list of certs usable for the domains.
for domain in cert_domains:
domains.setdefault(domain, []).append(cert)
# Sort the certificates to prefer good ones.
import datetime
now = datetime.datetime.utcnow()
ret = { }
for domain, cert_list in domains.items():
cert_list.sort(key = lambda cert : (
# must be valid NOW
cert.not_valid_before <= now <= cert.not_valid_after,
# prefer one that is not self-signed
cert.issuer != cert.subject,
# prefer one with the expiration furthest into the future so
# that we can easily rotate to new certs as we get them
cert.not_valid_after,
# in case a certificate is installed in multiple paths,
# prefer the... lexicographically last one?
cert._filename,
), reverse=True)
cert = cert_list.pop(0)
ret[domain] = {
"private-key": cert._private_key._filename,
"certificate": cert._filename,
"primary-domain": cert._primary_domain,
}
return ret
def get_domain_ssl_files(domain, ssl_certificates, env, allow_missing_cert=False):
# Get the default paths.
ssl_private_key = os.path.join(os.path.join(env["STORAGE_ROOT"], 'ssl', 'ssl_private_key.pem'))
ssl_certificate = os.path.join(os.path.join(env["STORAGE_ROOT"], 'ssl', 'ssl_certificate.pem'))
if domain == env['PRIMARY_HOSTNAME']:
# The primary domain must use the server certificate because
# it is hard-coded in some service configuration files.
return ssl_private_key, ssl_certificate, None
wildcard_domain = re.sub("^[^\.]+", "*", domain)
if domain in ssl_certificates:
cert_info = ssl_certificates[domain]
cert_type = "multi-domain"
elif wildcard_domain in ssl_certificates:
cert_info = ssl_certificates[wildcard_domain]
cert_type = "wildcard"
elif not allow_missing_cert:
# No certificate is available for this domain! Return default files.
ssl_via = "Using certificate for %s." % env['PRIMARY_HOSTNAME']
return ssl_private_key, ssl_certificate, ssl_via
else:
# No certificate is available - and warn appropriately.
return None
# 'via' is a hint to the user about which certificate is in use for the domain
if cert_info['certificate'] == os.path.join(env["STORAGE_ROOT"], 'ssl', 'ssl_certificate.pem'):
# Using the server certificate.
via = "Using same %s certificate as for %s." % (cert_type, env['PRIMARY_HOSTNAME'])
elif cert_info['primary-domain'] != domain and cert_info['primary-domain'] in ssl_certificates and cert_info == ssl_certificates[cert_info['primary-domain']]:
via = "Using same %s certificate as for %s." % (cert_type, cert_info['primary-domain'])
else:
via = None # don't show a hint - show expiration info instead
return cert_info['private-key'], cert_info['certificate'], via
def create_csr(domain, ssl_key, country_code, env):
return shell("check_output", [
"openssl", "req", "-new",
"-key", ssl_key,
"-sha256",
"-subj", "/C=%s/ST=/L=/O=/CN=%s" % (country_code, domain)])
def install_cert(domain, ssl_cert, ssl_chain, env):
# Write the combined cert+chain to a temporary path and validate that it is OK.
# The certificate always goes above the chain.
import tempfile
fd, fn = tempfile.mkstemp('.pem')
os.write(fd, (ssl_cert + '\n' + ssl_chain).encode("ascii"))
os.close(fd)
# Do validation on the certificate before installing it.
ssl_private_key = os.path.join(os.path.join(env["STORAGE_ROOT"], 'ssl', 'ssl_private_key.pem'))
cert_status, cert_status_details = check_certificate(domain, fn, ssl_private_key)
if cert_status != "OK":
if cert_status == "SELF-SIGNED":
cert_status = "This is a self-signed certificate. I can't install that."
os.unlink(fn)
if cert_status_details is not None:
cert_status += " " + cert_status_details
return cert_status
# Where to put it?
# Make a unique path for the certificate.
from cryptography.hazmat.primitives import hashes
from binascii import hexlify
cert = load_pem(load_cert_chain(fn)[0])
all_domains, cn = get_certificate_domains(cert)
path = "%s-%s-%s.pem" % (
safe_domain_name(cn), # common name, which should be filename safe because it is IDNA-encoded, but in case of a malformed cert make sure it's ok to use as a filename
cert.not_valid_after.date().isoformat().replace("-", ""), # expiration date
hexlify(cert.fingerprint(hashes.SHA256())).decode("ascii")[0:8], # fingerprint prefix
)
ssl_certificate = os.path.join(os.path.join(env["STORAGE_ROOT"], 'ssl', path))
# Install the certificate.
os.makedirs(os.path.dirname(ssl_certificate), exist_ok=True)
shutil.move(fn, ssl_certificate)
ret = ["OK"]
# When updating the cert for PRIMARY_HOSTNAME, symlink it from the system
# certificate path, which is hard-coded for various purposes, and then
# restart postfix and dovecot.
if domain == env['PRIMARY_HOSTNAME']:
# Update symlink.
system_ssl_certificate = os.path.join(os.path.join(env["STORAGE_ROOT"], 'ssl', 'ssl_certificate.pem'))
os.unlink(system_ssl_certificate)
os.symlink(ssl_certificate, system_ssl_certificate)
# Restart postfix and dovecot so they pick up the new file.
shell('check_call', ["/usr/sbin/service", "postfix", "restart"])
shell('check_call', ["/usr/sbin/service", "dovecot", "restart"])
ret.append("mail services restarted")
# The DANE TLSA record will remain valid so long as the private key
# hasn't changed. We don't ever change the private key automatically.
# If the user does it, they must manually update DNS.
# Update the web configuration so nginx picks up the new certificate file.
from web_update import do_web_update
ret.append( do_web_update(env) )
return "\n".join(ret)
def check_certificate(domain, ssl_certificate, ssl_private_key, warn_if_expiring_soon=True, rounded_time=False, just_check_domain=False):
# Check that the ssl_certificate & ssl_private_key files are good
# for the provided domain.
from cryptography.hazmat.primitives.asymmetric.rsa import RSAPrivateKey
from cryptography.x509 import Certificate
# The ssl_certificate file may contain a chain of certificates. We'll
# need to split that up before we can pass anything to openssl or
# parse them in Python. Parse it with the cryptography library.
try:
ssl_cert_chain = load_cert_chain(ssl_certificate)
cert = load_pem(ssl_cert_chain[0])
if not isinstance(cert, Certificate): raise ValueError("This is not a certificate file.")
except ValueError as e:
return ("There is a problem with the certificate file: %s" % str(e), None)
# First check that the domain name is one of the names allowed by
# the certificate.
if domain is not None:
certificate_names, cert_primary_name = get_certificate_domains(cert)
# Check that the domain appears among the acceptable names, or a wildcard
# form of the domain name (which is a stricter check than the specs but
# should work in normal cases).
wildcard_domain = re.sub("^[^\.]+", "*", domain)
if domain not in certificate_names and wildcard_domain not in certificate_names:
return ("The certificate is for the wrong domain name. It is for %s."
% ", ".join(sorted(certificate_names)), None)
# Second, check that the certificate matches the private key.
if ssl_private_key is not None:
try:
priv_key = load_pem(open(ssl_private_key, 'rb').read())
except ValueError as e:
return ("The private key file %s is not a private key file: %s" % (ssl_private_key, str(e)), None)
if not isinstance(priv_key, RSAPrivateKey):
return ("The private key file %s is not a private key file." % ssl_private_key, None)
if priv_key.public_key().public_numbers() != cert.public_key().public_numbers():
return ("The certificate does not correspond to the private key at %s." % ssl_private_key, None)
# We could also use the openssl command line tool to get the modulus
# listed in each file. The output of each command below looks like "Modulus=XXXXX".
# $ openssl rsa -inform PEM -noout -modulus -in ssl_private_key
# $ openssl x509 -in ssl_certificate -noout -modulus
# Third, check if the certificate is self-signed. Return a special flag string.
if cert.issuer == cert.subject:
return ("SELF-SIGNED", None)
# When selecting which certificate to use for non-primary domains, we check if the primary
# certificate or a www-parent-domain certificate is good for the domain. There's no need
# to run extra checks beyond this point.
if just_check_domain:
return ("OK", None)
# Check that the certificate hasn't expired. The datetimes returned by the
# certificate are 'naive' and in UTC. We need to get the current time in UTC.
import datetime
now = datetime.datetime.utcnow()
if not(cert.not_valid_before <= now <= cert.not_valid_after):
return ("The certificate has expired or is not yet valid. It is valid from %s to %s." % (cert.not_valid_before, cert.not_valid_after), None)
# Next validate that the certificate is valid. This checks whether the certificate
# is self-signed, that the chain of trust makes sense, that it is signed by a CA
# that Ubuntu has installed on this machine's list of CAs, and I think that it hasn't
# expired.
# The certificate chain has to be passed separately and is given via STDIN.
# This command returns a non-zero exit status in most cases, so trap errors.
retcode, verifyoutput = shell('check_output', [
"openssl",
"verify", "-verbose",
"-purpose", "sslserver", "-policy_check",]
+ ([] if len(ssl_cert_chain) == 1 else ["-untrusted", "/proc/self/fd/0"])
+ [ssl_certificate],
input=b"\n\n".join(ssl_cert_chain[1:]),
trap=True)
if "self signed" in verifyoutput:
# Certificate is self-signed. Probably we detected this above.
return ("SELF-SIGNED", None)
elif retcode != 0:
if "unable to get local issuer certificate" in verifyoutput:
return ("The certificate is missing an intermediate chain or the intermediate chain is incorrect or incomplete. (%s)" % verifyoutput, None)
# There is some unknown problem. Return the `openssl verify` raw output.
return ("There is a problem with the SSL certificate.", verifyoutput.strip())
else:
# `openssl verify` returned a zero exit status so the cert is currently
# good.
# But is it expiring soon?
cert_expiration_date = cert.not_valid_after
ndays = (cert_expiration_date-now).days
if not rounded_time or ndays < 7:
expiry_info = "The certificate expires in %d days on %s." % (ndays, cert_expiration_date.strftime("%x"))
elif ndays <= 14:
expiry_info = "The certificate expires in less than two weeks, on %s." % cert_expiration_date.strftime("%x")
elif ndays <= 31:
expiry_info = "The certificate expires in less than a month, on %s." % cert_expiration_date.strftime("%x")
else:
expiry_info = "The certificate expires on %s." % cert_expiration_date.strftime("%x")
if ndays <= 31 and warn_if_expiring_soon:
return ("The certificate is expiring soon: " + expiry_info, None)
# Return the special OK code.
return ("OK", expiry_info)
def load_cert_chain(pemfile):
# A certificate .pem file may contain a chain of certificates.
# Load the file and split them apart.
re_pem = rb"(-+BEGIN (?:.+)-+[\r\n]+(?:[A-Za-z0-9+/=]{1,64}[\r\n]+)+-+END (?:.+)-+[\r\n]+)"
with open(pemfile, "rb") as f:
pem = f.read() + b"\n" # ensure trailing newline
pemblocks = re.findall(re_pem, pem)
if len(pemblocks) == 0:
raise ValueError("File does not contain valid PEM data.")
return pemblocks
def load_pem(pem):
# Parse a "---BEGIN .... END---" PEM string and return a Python object for it
# using classes from the cryptography package.
from cryptography.x509 import load_pem_x509_certificate
from cryptography.hazmat.primitives import serialization
from cryptography.hazmat.backends import default_backend
pem_type = re.match(b"-+BEGIN (.*?)-+[\r\n]", pem)
if pem_type is None:
raise ValueError("File is not a valid PEM-formatted file.")
pem_type = pem_type.group(1)
if pem_type in (b"RSA PRIVATE KEY", b"PRIVATE KEY"):
return serialization.load_pem_private_key(pem, password=None, backend=default_backend())
if pem_type == b"CERTIFICATE":
return load_pem_x509_certificate(pem, default_backend())
raise ValueError("Unsupported PEM object type: " + pem_type.decode("ascii", "replace"))
def get_certificate_domains(cert):
from cryptography.x509 import DNSName, ExtensionNotFound, OID_COMMON_NAME, OID_SUBJECT_ALTERNATIVE_NAME
import idna
names = set()
cn = None
# The domain may be found in the Subject Common Name (CN). This comes back as an IDNA (ASCII)
# string, which is the format we store domains in - so good.
try:
cn = cert.subject.get_attributes_for_oid(OID_COMMON_NAME)[0].value
names.add(cn)
except IndexError:
# No common name? Certificate is probably generated incorrectly.
# But we'll let it error-out when it doesn't find the domain.
pass
# ... or be one of the Subject Alternative Names. The cryptography library handily IDNA-decodes
# the names for us. We must encode back to ASCII, but wildcard certificates can't pass through
# IDNA encoding/decoding so we must special-case. See https://github.com/pyca/cryptography/pull/2071.
def idna_decode_dns_name(dns_name):
if dns_name.startswith("*."):
return "*." + idna.encode(dns_name[2:]).decode('ascii')
else:
return idna.encode(dns_name).decode('ascii')
try:
sans = cert.extensions.get_extension_for_oid(OID_SUBJECT_ALTERNATIVE_NAME).value.get_values_for_type(DNSName)
for san in sans:
names.add(idna_decode_dns_name(san))
except ExtensionNotFound:
pass
return names, cn