gnutls fails to use Verisign CA cert without a Basic Constraint
Tomas Mraz
tmraz at redhat.com
Fri Jan 9 13:44:09 CET 2009
On Fri, 2009-01-09 at 12:09 +0100, Simon Josefsson wrote:
> Tomas Mraz <tmraz at redhat.com> writes:
>
> > On Fri, 2009-01-09 at 11:16 +0100, Simon Josefsson wrote:
> >> Simon Josefsson <simon at josefsson.org> writes:
> >>
> >> > "Douglas E. Engert" <deengert at anl.gov> writes:
> >> >
> >> >> Attached are the server cert (auth2.it.anl.gov), the intermediate cert (f0a38a80.0)
> >> >> and the CA self signed cert (7651b327.0)
> >> >
> >> > Thanks, I can reproduce the problem. Should be fixed with this patch:
> >> >
> >> > http://git.savannah.gnu.org/cgit/gnutls.git/commit/
> >>
> >> Sorry, that link was wrong. For the 2.6.x branch the proper link is:
> >>
> >> http://git.savannah.gnu.org/gitweb/?p=gnutls.git;a=commitdiff;h=423fc8b82f2b9aa3ea820cd5cf75d5813dffbbf0
> >>
> >> Please test the patch and confirm whether or not it works for you. I
> >> think we should do a new 2.6.x release to deal with this.
> >
> > I suppose there is an extraneous gnutls_assert () call in the case the
> > cert is V1 and the appropriate flags are set.
>
> The gnutls_assert() is there for logging, and can be useful when
> understanding which path an execution took. If debug logging is not
> used (the default) it is essentially a no-op.
>
> I guess we can remove the call if it is triggered very often, but
> logging about V1 CA's might make someone notice it and do something
> about it. I'd consider a V1 CA something of an exception and worth
> worrying about, hence the assert call.
Ah, OK. That makes good sense.
--
Tomas Mraz
No matter how far down the wrong road you've gone, turn back.
Turkish proverb
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