Support IP allocation during the 4-Way Handshake as defined in the P2P
spec. This is the supplicant side implementation.
The API requires the user to set hs->support_ip_allocation true before
eapol_start(). On HANDSHAKE_EVENT_COMPLETE, if this same flag is still
set, we've received the IP lease, the netmask and the authenticator's
IP from the authenticator and there's no need to start DHCP. If the
flag is cleared, the user needs to use DHCP.
On EAP events, call the handshake_event handler with the new event type
HANDSHAKE_EVENT_EAP_NOTIFY isntead of the eapol_event callback.
This allows the handler to be set before calling
netdev_connect/netdev_connect_wsc. It's also in theory more type-safe
because we don't need the cast in netdev_connect_wsc anymore.
Convert the handshake event callback type to use variable argument
list to allow for more flexibility in event-specific arguments
passed to the callbacks.
Note the uint16_t reason code is promoted to an int when using variable
arguments so va_arg(args, int) has to be used.
The handshake object had 4 setters for authenticator/supplicant IE.
Since the IE ultimately gets put into the same buffer, there really
only needs to be a single setter for authenticator/supplicant. The
handshake object can deal with parsing to decide what kind of IE it
is (WPA or RSN).
FILS-FT is a special case with respect to the PTK keys. The KCK getter
was updated to handle both FT-FILS AKMs, by returning the offset in
the PTK to the special KCK generated during FILS. A getter for the KCK
length was added, which handles the SHA384 variant. The PTK size was
also updated since FILS-FT can generate an additional 56 bytes of PTK
Keeping the ERP cache on the handshake object allows station.c to
handle all the ERP details and encapsulate them into a handshake.
FILS can then use the ERP cache right from the handshake rather
than getting it itself.
With FILS support coming there needs to be a way to set the PTK directly.
Other AKMs derive the PTK via the 4-way handshake, but FILS computes the
PTK on its own.
The handshake_state only holds a single AKM value. FILS depends on the AP
supporting EAP as well as FILS. The first time IWD connects, it will do a
full EAP auth. Subsequent connections (assuming FILS is supported) will use
FILS. But if the AP does not support FILS there is no reason to cache the
ERP keys.
This adds the supp_fils to the handshake_state. Now, station.c can set this
flag while building the handshake. This flag can later be checked when
caching the ERP keys.
The crypto_ptk was hard coded for 16 byte KCK/KEK. Depending on the
AKM these can be up to 32 bytes. This changes completely removes the
crypto_ptk struct and adds getters to the handshake object for the
kck and kek. Like before the PTK is derived into a continuous buffer,
and the kck/kek getters take care of returning the proper key offset
depending on AKM.
To allow for larger than 16 byte keys aes_unwrap needed to be
modified to take the kek length.
Non-802.11 AKMs can define their own key lengths. Currently only OWE does
this, and the MIC/KEK/KCK lengths will be determined by the PMK length so
we need to save it.
Currently, netdev triggers the HANDSHAKE_COMPLETE event after completing
the SET_STATION (after setting the pairwise key). Depending on the timing
this may happen before the GTK/IGTK are set which will result in group
traffic not working initially (the GTK/IGTK would still get set, but group
traffic would not work immediately after DBus said you were connected, this
mainly poses a problem with autotests).
In order to fix this, several flags were added in netdev_handshake_state:
ptk_installed, gtk_installed, igtk_installed, and completed. Each of these
flags are set true when their respective keys are set, and in each key
callback we try to trigger the handshake complete event (assuming all the
flags are true). Initially the gtk/igtk flags are set to true, for reasons
explained below.
In the WPA2 case, all the key setter functions are called sequentially from
eapol. With this change, the PTK is now set AFTER the gtk/igtk. This is
because the gtk/igtk are optional and only set if group traffic is allowed.
If the gtk/igtk are not used, we set the PTK and can immediately trigger the
handshake complete event (since gtk_installed/igtk_installed are initialized
as true). When the gtk/igtk are being set, we immediately set their flags to
false and wait for their callbacks in addition to the PTK callback. Doing it
this way handles both group traffic and non group traffic paths.
WPA1 throws a wrench into this since the group keys are obtained in a
separate handshake. For this case a new flag was added to the handshake_state,
'wait_for_gtk'. This allows netdev to set the PTK after the initial 4-way,
but still wait for the gtk/igtk setters to get called before triggering the
handshake complete event. As a precaution, netdev sets a timeout that will
trigger if the gtk/igtk setters are never called. In this case we can still
complete the connection, but print a warning that group traffic will not be
allowed.
Add places to store the GTK data, index and RSC in struct
handshake_state and add a setter function for these fields. We may want
to also convert install_gtk to use these fields similar to install_ptk.
To avoid confusion in case of an authenticator side handshake_state
structure and eapol_sm structure, rename own_ie to supplicant_ie and
ap_ie to authenticator_ie. Also rename
handshake_state_set_{own,ap}_{rsn,wpa} and fix when we call
handshake_state_setup_own_ciphers. As a result
handshake_state_set_authenticator, if needed, should be called before
handshake_state_set_{own,ap}_{rsn,wpa}.
Both SAE and adhoc can benefit from knowing whether the handshake state
is an authenticator or a supplicant. It will allow both to easily
obtain the remote address rather than sorting out if aa/spa match the
devices own address.
SAE generates the PMKID during the authentication process, rather than
generating it on-the-fly using the PMK. For this reason SAE needs to be
able to set the PMKID once its generated. A new flag was also added
(has_pmkid) which signifies if the PMKID was set or if it should be
generated.
SAE needs access to the raw passphrase, not the PSK which network
saves. This changes saves the passphrase in network and handshake
objects, as well as adds getters to both objects so SAE can retrieve
the passphrase.
If netdev fails to set the keys, there was no way for device/ap to
know. A new handshake event was added for this. The key setting
failure function was also fixed to support both AP/station iftypes.
It will now automatically send either a disconnect or del_station
depending on the interface type.
In similar manner, netdev_handshake_failed was also modified to
support both AP/station iftypes. Now, any handshake event listeners
should call netdev_handshake_failed upon a handshake failure
event, including AP.
Handshake related netdev events were removed in favor of
handshake events. Now events will be emitted on the handshake
object related to the 4-way handshake and key settings. Events
are:
HANDSHAKE_EVENT_STARTED
HANDSHAKE_EVENT_SETTING_KEYS
HANDSHAKE_EVENT_COMPLETE
HANDSHAKE_EVENT_FAILED
Right now, since netdev only operates in station mode, nothing
listens for COMPLETE/FAILED, as device/wsc gets notified by the
connect_cb when the connection was successful. The COMPLETE/
FAILED were added in preperation for AP moving into eapol/netdev.
Until now we'd save the second 32 bytes of the MSK as the PMK and use
that for the PMK-R0 as well as the PMKID calculation. The PMKID
actually uses the first 32 bytes of the PMK while the PMK-R0's XXKey
input maps to the second 32 bytes. Add a pmk_len parameter to
handshake_state_set_pmk to handle that. Update the eapol_eap_results_cb
802.11 quotes to the 2016 version.
Add a utility to append a KDE to the key_data field in an EAPoL frame.
The KDE types enum is actually added to handshake.h because we've got
the utilities for finding those KDEs in a buffer there. The new
function is specific to EAPoL-Key frames though and perhaps to simple to
be split across handshake.c and eapol.c. Also it didn't seem useful to
use the ie_tlv_builder here.
Split the igtk parameter to handshake_state_install_igtk into one
parameter for the actual IGTK buffer and one for the IPN buffer instead
of requiring the caller to have them both in one continuous buffer.
With FT protocol, one is received encrypted and the other in plain text.
struct handshake_state is an object that stores all the key data and other
authentication state and does the low level operations on the keys. Together
with the next patch this mostly just splits eapol.c into two layers
so that the key operations can also be used in Fast Transitions which don't
use eapol.