| _ _ ____ _ |
| ___| | | | _ \| | |
| / __| | | | |_) | | |
| | (__| |_| | _ <| |___ |
| \___|\___/|_| \_\_____| |
| |
| SSL problems |
| |
| First, let's establish that we often refer to TLS and SSL interchangeably as |
| SSL here. The current protocol is called TLS, it was called SSL a long time |
| ago. |
| |
| There are several known reasons why a connection that involves SSL might |
| fail. This is a document that attempts to details the most common ones and |
| how to mitigate them. |
| |
| CA certs |
| |
| CA certs are used to digitally verify the server's certificate. You need a |
| "ca bundle" for this. See lots of more details on this in the SSLCERTS |
| document. |
| |
| CA bundle missing intermediate certificates |
| |
| When using said CA bundle to verify a server cert, you will experience |
| problems if your CA cert does not have the certificates for the |
| intermediates in the whole trust chain. |
| |
| SSL version |
| |
| Some broken servers fail to support the protocol negotiation properly that |
| SSL servers are supposed to handle. This may cause the connection to fail |
| completely. Sometimes you may need to explicitly select a SSL version to use |
| when connecting to make the connection succeed. |
| |
| An additional complication can be that modern SSL libraries sometimes are |
| built with support for older SSL and TLS versions disabled! |
| |
| SSL ciphers |
| |
| Clients give servers a list of ciphers to select from. If the list doesn't |
| include any ciphers the server wants/can use, the connection handshake |
| fails. |
| |
| curl has recently disabled the user of a whole bunch of seriously insecure |
| ciphers from its default set (slightly depending on SSL backend in use). |
| |
| You may have to explicitly provide an alternative list of ciphers for curl |
| to use to allow the server to use a WEAK cipher for you. |
| |
| Note that these weak ciphers are identified as flawed. For example, this |
| includes symmetric ciphers with less than 128 bit keys and RC4. |
| |
| References: |
| |
| https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-popov-tls-prohibiting-rc4-01 |
| |
| Allow BEAST |
| |
| BEAST is the name of a TLS 1.0 attack that surfaced 2011. When adding means |
| to mitigate this attack, it turned out that some broken servers out there in |
| the wild didn't work properly with the BEAST mitigation in place. |
| |
| To make such broken servers work, the --ssl-allow-beast option was |
| introduced. Exactly as it sounds, it re-introduces the BEAST vulnerability |
| but on the other hand it allows curl to connect to that kind of strange |
| servers. |