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Re: url_rewrite_program shows IP addresses instead of domain name when rewriting SSL/HTTPS

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Sorry, I just realized, I sent you a private email instead of to the mailing list. Apologies for that. 

Hi Amos,

I did some progress today so that least I'm not getting any errors in the browser, te url_redirect_program receives the actual url. Redirecting normal http urls work fine, but redirecting https urls results in a similar error in the logs:
"
2016/07/07 17:19:28| SECURITY ALERT: Host header forgery detected on local=31.13.92.36:443 remote=x.x.x.x:65228 FD 18 flags=33 (local IP does not match any domain IP)
2016/07/07 17:19:28| SECURITY ALERT: on URL: www.facebook.com:443
"
And the browser tab hags (in page loading)

Heres the squid.conf important parts

"
acl http_sites dstdomain play.google.com mydomain.com
acl https_sites ssl::server_name play.google.com mydomain.com

acl HTTP proto HTTP
acl HTTPS proto HTTPS

http_access allow http_sites
http_access allow https_sites

sslcrtd_program /lib/squid/ssl_crtd -s /var/lib/ssl_db -M 4MB

http_access allow all

http_port 3127
http_port 3128 intercept
https_port 3129 cert=/etc/squid/ssl/example.com.cert key=/etc/squid/ssl/example.com.private ssl-bump intercept generate-host-certificates=on  version=1 options=NO_SSLv2,NO_SSLv3,SINGLE_DH_USE capath=/etc/ssl/certs/

sslproxy_cert_error allow all 
sslproxy_flags DONT_VERIFY_PEER 

acl step1 at_step SslBump1
acl step2 at_step SslBump2
acl step3 at_step SslBump3

ssl_bump peek step1 all
ssl_bump splice step2 all !https_sites 
ssl_bump bump step3 all !https_sites


url_rewrite_program /bin/bash -c -l /etc/squid/redirect.bash
url_rewrite_extras "%>a/%>A %<A %un %>rm myip=%la myport=%lp  ru=%ru ru2=%>ru ru3=%<ru rd=%>rd rd2=%<rd h=%>h ssl1=%ssl::bump_mode ssl2=%ssl::>sni rp1=%rp rp2=%>rp rp3=%<rp h1=%>h h2=%>ha"
logformat squid "%>a/%>A %<A %un %>rm myip=%la myport=%lp  ru=%ru ru2=%>ru ru3=%<ru rd=%>rd rd2=%<rd h=%>h ssl1=%ssl::bump_mode ssl2=%ssl::>sni rp1=%rp rp2=%>rp rp3=%<rp h1=%>h h2=%>ha"
url_rewrite_access allow all !http_sites !https_sites

# Leave coredumps in the first cache dir
coredump_dir /var/cache/squid

"

I searched a bit on the "Host header forgery detected" but could not find a similar situation to mines
Any ideas how to overcome this error?

Many thanks and regards,
Moataz

On Wed, Jul 6, 2016 at 9:30 AM, Amos Jeffries <squid3@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
On 2016-07-06 10:48, Moataz Elmasry wrote:
Hi all,

I'm trying to create a kind of captive portal when only my domain and
google play are whitelisted and other addresses(http/https) are
forwarded to my domain.
All http requests are landing fine in the url_rewrite program, while
the https requests appear as only the IP address but not the dns name.
I'm aware of http://wiki.squid-cache.org/Features/SslPeekAndSplice and
especially the note that during ssl_bump no dns name is available yet
and instead one should be using the acl ssl::server_name directive,
but for some reason no https address is being sent to my url_rewrite
program.

The same SSL certificate used on my domain is also being used with
squid at https_port


Here's my squid.conf

"

pinger_enable off
acl localnet src 10.0.0.0/8 [1] # RFC1918 possible internal network

acl localnet src 172.16.0.0/12 [2] # RFC1918 possible internal network
acl localnet src 192.168.0.0/16 [3] # RFC1918 possible internal
network

acl SSL_ports port 443
acl Safe_ports port 80 # http
acl Safe_ports port 443 # https
acl Safe_ports port 1025-65535 # unregistered ports
acl CONNECT method CONNECT

http_access deny !Safe_ports
http_access deny CONNECT !SSL_ports

http_access allow localhost manager
http_access deny manager
http_access allow localnet

http_access allow localhost

acl http dstdomain play.google.com [4] mydomain.com [5]
acl https ssl::server_name play.google.com [4] mydomain.com [5]

This is ... weird. There is nothing in the ACL matching which would indicate it was HTTP vs HTTPS.

* dstdomain can match for CONNECT tunnels transferring non-HTTP traffic when the URI contains the domain specified. It only indicates that HTTP was used by the client ... except for intercepted HTTPS traffic, where it merely indicates that Squid itself is wrapping the inbound traffic into HTTP compatible format before interpreting them. Squid sometimes uses the TLS SNI value as the URI dstdomain.
  -> unreliable.

* TLS SNI can contain the listed server name for non-HTTPS protocols.
  -> unreliable.


http_access allow http
http_access allow https

* "http_access" means Squid is testing whether an HTTP protocol client is allowed to use the proxy. The "http" URL contains HTTP protocol matching. Which is okay, but see above about what the "dstdomain "value could be.

* The "https" ACL contains TLS details matching - so is usually not possible to even test like this.

* localnet and localhost are already allowed to do anything safe by the earlier http_access rules. I doubt these confused matches are even getting used.


url_rewrite_program /bin/bash -c -l /etc/squid/redirect.bash

url_rewrite_access allow all !http
url_rewrite_access allow all !https

Several problems here:

* "all" is only a meaningless waste of CPU time and memory in this usage.

* "https" ACL probably is not possible to match. Rewriting of the *HTTP* URL is a HTTP decision. Not TLS.

* The use of negation (!) means you have expicitly configured Squid *not* to send any lookups to the helper when the ACL listed domain name(s) are present in the HTTP request.
 So you were asking why no requests with the domain name show up in the helper?
 Squid is obeying your explicit instructions not to send them.



sslcrtd_program /lib/squid/ssl_crtd -s /var/lib/ssl_db -M 4MB

http_access allow all

Not safe.

localnet and localhost are already allowed to do anything safe by the earlier http_access rules. SO you should not see a change if you set this back to the "deny all" which it should be.


http_port 3127
http_port 3128 intercept

Not safe practice. Port 3128 is the officialy registered Squid proxy port and quite well known. There are several attacks that can be done if the attacker happens to identify what intercept port is numbered and connect there. Use a randomly selected other port number.

Same for the below 3129. It is used in our documetation as an example only.


https_port 3129 intercept cert=mycert.cert key=mykey.key ssl-bump
intercept generate-host-certificates=on  version=1
options=NO_SSLv2,NO_SSLv3,SINGLE_DH_USE  cafile=Intermediate.crt

always_direct allow all

always_direct is not needed for SSL-Bump. It was a bug workaround needed only for a very few releases many years ago now.

acl step1 at_step SslBump1
acl step2 at_step SslBump2
acl step3 at_step SslBump3

ssl_bump splice localhost
ssl_bump splice https


You are splicing traffic. This means there are no HTTPS messages interpreted by Squid. Thus no possibility of your URL-rewrite helper ever being even considered for use on them.
At best it might be considered for the CONNECT tunnel used by splice, but that means CONNECT URI has its domain set, the dstdomain would match and "!http" comes into affect to prevent it being asked.


ssl_bump peek step1
ssl_bump peek all

coredump_dir /var/cache/squid
"

So any idea why no https urls are being redirected to the url_rewrite
program?
Any alternative solution is also very much welcome


1) If you really meant to detect HTTP vs HTTPS traffic. Use the proper ACL definitions:
  acl HTTP proto HTTP
  acl HTTPS proto HTTPS


2) Most rewriters cannot correctly handle the URI type used on CONNECT tunnels, and more importantly are not able to safely decide where to redirect to even if they could produce the right URI output.

So, normal installations should block requests to your re-writer by using the available "CONNECT" ACL like so:
 url_rewrite_access deny CONNECT

However, if your rewriter is an exception and can actually divert whole tunnels correctly (or knows corectly to return "ERR" and skip re-writing). Then use the method field it receives from Squid to have it decide what to do.

3) If you want to rewrite or redirect https:// URLs ... in other words modifying the HTTPS messages inside the crypto.

That requires "ssl_bump bump" action to be configured and the traffic decrypted.


HTH
Amos


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