tailscale/control/controlclient/sign_supported.go
Nick Khyl 11d205f6c4 control/controlclient,posture,util/syspolicy: use predefined syspolicy keys instead of string literals
With the upcoming syspolicy changes, it's imperative that all syspolicy keys are defined in the syspolicy package
for proper registration. Otherwise, the corresponding policy settings will not be read.

This updates a couple of places where we still use string literals rather than syspolicy consts.

Updates #12687

Signed-off-by: Nick Khyl <nickk@tailscale.com>
2024-09-04 15:25:19 -05:00

206 lines
5.2 KiB
Go

// Copyright (c) Tailscale Inc & AUTHORS
// SPDX-License-Identifier: BSD-3-Clause
//go:build windows
// darwin,cgo is also supported by certstore but untested, so it is not enabled.
package controlclient
import (
"crypto"
"crypto/rsa"
"crypto/x509"
"errors"
"fmt"
"sync"
"time"
"github.com/tailscale/certstore"
"tailscale.com/tailcfg"
"tailscale.com/types/key"
"tailscale.com/util/syspolicy"
)
var getMachineCertificateSubjectOnce struct {
sync.Once
v string // Subject of machine certificate to search for
}
// getMachineCertificateSubject returns the exact name of a Subject that needs
// to be present in an identity's certificate chain to sign a RegisterRequest,
// formatted as per pkix.Name.String(). The Subject may be that of the identity
// itself, an intermediate CA or the root CA.
//
// If getMachineCertificateSubject() returns "" then no lookup will occur and
// each RegisterRequest will be unsigned.
//
// Example: "CN=Tailscale Inc Test Root CA,OU=Tailscale Inc Test Certificate Authority,O=Tailscale Inc,ST=ON,C=CA"
func getMachineCertificateSubject() string {
getMachineCertificateSubjectOnce.Do(func() {
getMachineCertificateSubjectOnce.v, _ = syspolicy.GetString(syspolicy.MachineCertificateSubject, "")
})
return getMachineCertificateSubjectOnce.v
}
var (
errNoMatch = errors.New("no matching certificate")
errBadRequest = errors.New("malformed request")
)
func isSupportedCertificate(cert *x509.Certificate) bool {
return cert.PublicKeyAlgorithm == x509.RSA
}
func isSubjectInChain(subject string, chain []*x509.Certificate) bool {
if len(chain) == 0 || chain[0] == nil {
return false
}
for _, c := range chain {
if c == nil {
continue
}
if c.Subject.String() == subject {
return true
}
}
return false
}
func selectIdentityFromSlice(subject string, ids []certstore.Identity, now time.Time) (certstore.Identity, []*x509.Certificate) {
var bestCandidate struct {
id certstore.Identity
chain []*x509.Certificate
}
for _, id := range ids {
chain, err := id.CertificateChain()
if err != nil {
continue
}
if len(chain) < 1 {
continue
}
if !isSupportedCertificate(chain[0]) {
continue
}
if now.Before(chain[0].NotBefore) || now.After(chain[0].NotAfter) {
// Certificate is not valid at this time
continue
}
if !isSubjectInChain(subject, chain) {
continue
}
// Select the most recently issued certificate. If there is a tie, pick
// one arbitrarily.
if len(bestCandidate.chain) > 0 && bestCandidate.chain[0].NotBefore.After(chain[0].NotBefore) {
continue
}
bestCandidate.id = id
bestCandidate.chain = chain
}
return bestCandidate.id, bestCandidate.chain
}
// findIdentity locates an identity from the Windows or Darwin certificate
// store. It returns the first certificate with a matching Subject anywhere in
// its certificate chain, so it is possible to search for the leaf certificate,
// intermediate CA or root CA. If err is nil then the returned identity will
// never be nil (if no identity is found, the error errNoMatch will be
// returned). If an identity is returned then its certificate chain is also
// returned.
func findIdentity(subject string, st certstore.Store) (certstore.Identity, []*x509.Certificate, error) {
ids, err := st.Identities()
if err != nil {
return nil, nil, err
}
selected, chain := selectIdentityFromSlice(subject, ids, clock.Now())
for _, id := range ids {
if id != selected {
id.Close()
}
}
if selected == nil {
return nil, nil, errNoMatch
}
return selected, chain, nil
}
// signRegisterRequest looks for a suitable machine identity from the local
// system certificate store, and if one is found, signs the RegisterRequest
// using that identity's public key. In addition to the signature, the full
// certificate chain is included so that the control server can validate the
// certificate from a copy of the root CA's certificate.
func signRegisterRequest(req *tailcfg.RegisterRequest, serverURL string, serverPubKey, machinePubKey key.MachinePublic) (err error) {
defer func() {
if err != nil {
err = fmt.Errorf("signRegisterRequest: %w", err)
}
}()
if req.Timestamp == nil {
return errBadRequest
}
machineCertificateSubject := getMachineCertificateSubject()
if machineCertificateSubject == "" {
return errCertificateNotConfigured
}
st, err := certstore.Open(certstore.System)
if err != nil {
return fmt.Errorf("open cert store: %w", err)
}
defer st.Close()
id, chain, err := findIdentity(machineCertificateSubject, st)
if err != nil {
return fmt.Errorf("find identity: %w", err)
}
defer id.Close()
signer, err := id.Signer()
if err != nil {
return fmt.Errorf("create signer: %w", err)
}
cl := 0
for _, c := range chain {
cl += len(c.Raw)
}
req.DeviceCert = make([]byte, 0, cl)
for _, c := range chain {
req.DeviceCert = append(req.DeviceCert, c.Raw...)
}
req.SignatureType = tailcfg.SignatureV2
h, err := HashRegisterRequest(req.SignatureType, req.Timestamp.UTC(), serverURL, req.DeviceCert, serverPubKey, machinePubKey)
if err != nil {
return fmt.Errorf("hash: %w", err)
}
req.Signature, err = signer.Sign(nil, h, &rsa.PSSOptions{
SaltLength: rsa.PSSSaltLengthEqualsHash,
Hash: crypto.SHA256,
})
if err != nil {
return fmt.Errorf("sign: %w", err)
}
return nil
}