> On Jan 28, 2015, at 8:47 AM, Dr. Stephen Henson <steve at openssl.org> wrote: > > On Wed, Jan 28, 2015, jonetsu at teksavvy.com wrote: > >> On Mon, 26 Jan 2015 22:35:12 -0500 >> Tom Francis <thomas.francis.jr at pobox.com> wrote: >> >> Thanks for the detailed comments. I understand the concerns, although >> there's one thing I do not see clearly, that is: >> >>> 2) Applications that don???t know they???re operating in FIPS >>> mode may attempt to use algorithms that are disallowed in FIPS mode, >>> but using an API that will actually succeed. >> >> How could this happen ? Do you have a practical use case ? Wouldn't >> OpenSSL in FIPS mode prevent the use of such algorithm in the first >> place ? >> > > OpenSSL does prevent the use of non-FIPS algorithms in FIPS mode but > applications don't always cleanly handle it. > > If the application uses TLS then it should be OK as non-FIPS ciphersuites > are automatically blocked. A possible gotcha is use of private keys encrypted > using the old MD5 PBE algorithm. > > If the application uses algorithms directly via for example EVP_DigestInit_ex() > then things are different. A non-FIPS application might never see an error > from EVP_DigestInit_ex() and not handle it properly (e.g. ignoring the > return value). This will cause a hard failure later on. > > Even if an application does check return values it might regard an error > return from EVP_DigestInit_ex() as a fatal error (it sometimes is: e.g. memory > allocation failure): it is unlikely to retry with a different algorithm. > > The correct thing to do is never attempt to use the non-FIPS algorithm in > the first place. What that measn in practice is that while some applications > will "just work" when FIPS mode is enabled, others need to be modified to > correctly handle FIPS. Actually, I was thinking of the 1.x FIPS module, and OpenSSL 0.9.8, where OpenSSL would prevent disallowed algorithms from being used, but only if you used the EVP interfaces. You could, for example, invoke MD5 directly. Did that change with 2.x? (it?s not something I paid much attention to, as I always used EVP, anyway). It?s also my understanding that the private APIs could still be used to bypass the FIPS mode algorithm checks, and that some applications may be using those. TOM > > Steve. > -- > Dr Stephen N. Henson. OpenSSL project core developer. > Commercial tech support now available see: http://www.openssl.org > _______________________________________________ > openssl-users mailing list > To unsubscribe: https://mta.openssl.org/mailman/listinfo/openssl-users >