Search squid archive

Re: TLS passthrough

[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

 



On 2023-09-29 10:55, Fernando Giorgetti wrote:
    Do you control the client application? If yes, then perhaps it can be
    adjusted to support HTTP proxies? In other words, the client will send a
    plain text HTTP CONNECT request to Squid and, upon receiving a 200
    (Connection Established) response headers, will start using TLS with the
    origin server. In this case, you do not need interception.


Nope, the client application is also used to communicate with other apps in
other environments.

FWIW, "used with other apps" does not imply or explain the "nope, we do not control the application" answer IMHO.


The SNI has to be used as the client/server apps perform
mutual TLS authentication.

To avoid a misunderstanding, nothing I have said precludes the use of TLS SNI by the client application. Thus, I am not sure why you are saying the above.


In order to evaluate if we can use Squid for this purpose, I have
also created a basic TLS client/server app to validate what is
happening. Basically my TLS client tries to connect directly to Squid
IP/Port and I am indicating the SNI so that the TLS handshake
passes.

FWIW, a scenario where the client application establishes a TLS connection with Squid https_port (configured as a reverse HTTPS proxy) will not work for your use case AFAICT. I am not sure why you are testing this. It has not been suggested on this mailing list.

BTW, you can use ("curl" or even "openssl s_client") and "openssl s_server" for basic tests. I recommend using well-known test programs (instead of custom apps) because doing so makes it easier for mailing list readers to understand what your test clients and servers are doing (and to reproduce your setup).


When I tried to make it work using a forward proxy with intercept and
ssl_bump, I could not make Squid peek at the SNI and tunnel the
request to the correct destination.

Please note that "forward proxy with intercept" is an oxymoron -- the two port modes (i.e. explicit "intercept" and default forward proxying) are mutually exclusive.

If you do not want to or cannot modify/configure the client application to use Squid as a forward HTTP proxy (as I detailed earlier; see the paragraph still quoted at the beginning of this message), then your other choice is interception (as I detailed earlier; see the "Squid supports blind tunneling of intercepted TCP connections" discussion in the previous exchange).

When Squid https_port gets an intercepted client TCP connection, Squid does not need SNI to know where to forward that TCP connection. Squid opens a TCP connection to the IP address where the client TCP connection was going (or trying to go) before it was intercepted. That intended destination IP address is delivered to Squid by the OS, as a part of interception mechanism/setup. TLS and SNI are not involved in this process.

If you have not tested an interception scenario, please do. If you have, please share your interception configuration, Squid configuration, and any relevant error/problem information.


HTH,

Alex.


On Fri, Sep 29, 2023 at 11:35 AM Alex Rousskov wrote:

    On 2023-09-29 09:17, Fernando Giorgetti wrote:

     > Actually I am evaluating if Squid can be used to proxy Non-HTTP/TLS
     > data, as we have a restricted environment where Squid is
    currently the
     > only way to get out to the internet.

    Yes, Squid can tunnel non-HTTP data, including TLS data.


     > The idea is that the client application will open a connection to
    a given
     > hostname and port (setting the SNI in the TLS options),
    considering that
     > the given hostname/port is the actual backend they're trying to
    reach.

    Do you control the client application? If yes, then perhaps it can be
    adjusted to support HTTP proxies? In other words, the client will
    send a
    plain text HTTP CONNECT request to Squid and, upon receiving a 200
    (Connection Established) response headers, will start using TLS with
    the
    origin server. In this case, you do not need interception.


     > We can either try to use a fake hostname (defined in the
    /etc/hosts of the
     > tls client machine) which would actually point to Squid's IP

    AFAICT, faking the IP address will not work without Squid source code
    modifications because a non-intercepting Squid https_port will want to
    terminate TLS -- such a port does not support blindly tunneling traffic.


     > or eventually
     > redirect traffic to the real destination into Squid using a DNAT
    rule.

    I am not a DNAT expert, but this sounds like interception to me. Bugs
    notwithstanding, Squid supports blind tunneling of intercepted TCP
    connections (to their intended destination):

          https_port X intercept ssl-bump ...
          ssl_bump splice all

    On a successful tunneling path, the above configuration does not care
    whether the intercepted traffic is TLS and will not peek at TLS SNI,
    but
    nothing in your requirements necessitates SNI knowledge AFAICT.

    If Squid fails to establish a TCP connection to the intended
    destination
    of the intercepted connection, then the situation becomes more complex:
    Squid (with the above configuration) assumes that the client is
    speaking
    TLS. Squid will attempt to bump the TLS client connection and send a
    Squid-generated HTTP error response to the client. AFAIK, this bumping
    and error sending attempt cannot be prevented in this case without
    Squid
    source code modifications: Squid used to be able to terminate a
    client-Squid connection instead of sending a Squid-generated HTTP error
    response (by replacing the corresponding Squid error page contents with
    a word "reset"). However, that feature was accidentally(?) dropped in
    2002 commit 76cdc28 AFAICT.


    HTH,

    Alex.


     > But overall, it will be a 1:1 relationship, meaning, the
    https_port on Squid
     > would be used exclusively to this purpose of proxying from a
    given source
     > to a given destination.
     >
     > That is why I was considering a reverse-proxy, but I had no luck
    with it
     > (actually
     > I was able to proxy HTTP/HTTPS, but not non-http).
     >
     > Thank you again,
     > Fernando
     >
     > On Thu, Sep 28, 2023 at 11:39 PM Alex Rousskov
     > <rousskov@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
    <mailto:rousskov@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
     > <mailto:rousskov@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
    <mailto:rousskov@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>>> wrote:
     >
     >     On 2023-09-28 20:35, Fernando Giorgetti wrote:
     >
     >      > Do you have any recommendations on how I could have it done?
     >
     >     I am unable to confirm whether Squid can do what you want or
    provide
     >     configuration recommendations because I do not yet know how
    your Squid
     >     will receive traffic (e.g., an intercepting proxy or an explicit
     >     forward
     >     HTTP proxy), what traffic Squid will receive (e.g., TLS,
    plain HTTP,
     >     something else), and what you want Squid to do with that traffic.
     >
     >     To make progress, I recommend describing the above details
    (for one
     >     typical use case?) and then answering any followup questions.
     >
     >
     >     Cheers,
     >
     >     Alex.
     >
     >
     >      > When my tls client tries to reach the target
    through Squid, using
     >      > a "ssl_bump splice", it seems like squid is trying to reach
     >     itself in a
     >      > loop.
     >      >
     >      > I have also tried including a peek first, but no luck.
     >      >
     >      > Thanks again for all suggestions.
     >      >
     >      > On Thu, Sep 28, 2023 at 7:23 PM Alex Rousskov wrote:
     >      >
     >      >     On 2023-09-28 15:23, Fernando Giorgetti wrote:
     >      >
     >      >      > Actually with the suggested blind passthrough,
    Squid would not
     >      >     handle
     >      >      > the TLS termination.
     >      >
     >      >     Correct.
     >      >
     >      >
     >      >      > how will Squid know what the target is?
     >      >
     >      >     In many cases, Squid can learn SNI by peeking at TLS
    ClientHello,
     >      >     without terminating TLS. Bugs notwithstanding, none of the
     >      >     configuration
     >      >     sketches I shared previously will do that though.
     >      >
     >      >
     >      >     HTH,
     >      >
     >      >     Alex.
     >      >
     >      >
     >      >
     >      >      > On Thu, Sep 28, 2023 at 1:02 PM Alex Rousskov wrote:
     >      >      >
     >      >      >     On 2023-09-28 11:31, Fernando Giorgetti wrote:
     >      >      >
     >      >      >      > And what should I do to let Squid use the SNI
     >     defined by
     >      >     the TLS
     >      >      >     client?
     >      >      >
     >      >      >     What do you want Squid to use that SNI for?
     >      >      >
     >      >      >     Alex.
     >      >      >
     >      >      >
     >      >      >      > On Thu, Sep 28, 2023 at 11:51 AM Alex
    Rousskov wrote:
     >      >      >      >
     >      >      >      >     On 2023-09-28 09:06, Fernando Giorgetti
    wrote:
     >      >      >      >      > Hi Matus, do you mean something like
    a DNAT
     >      >     (iptables) rule?
     >      >      >      >      > If so, I would say, it should work as
    well.
     >      >      >      >      >
     >      >      >      >      > But this is an environment I do not
    control,
     >     and I have
     >      >      >     been told
     >      >      >      >     to try
     >      >      >      >      > using an existing squid installation
    to proxy
     >      >     non-http/TLS
     >      >      >     data
     >      >      >      >     through.
     >      >      >      >      >
     >      >      >      >      > I appreciate any guidance or
    recommendation.
     >      >      >      >
     >      >      >      >
     >      >      >      >     Bugs notwithstanding, Squid can blindly
    tunnel
     >     intercepted
     >      >      >     (at TCP port
     >      >      >      >     X) TCP traffic to its intended destination:
     >      >      >      >
     >      >      >      >           https_port X intercept ssl-bump ...
     >      >      >      >           ssl_bump splice all
     >      >      >      >
     >      >      >      >
     >      >      >      >     Without interception, then Squid can only
     >     tunnel stuff
     >      >     inside
     >      >      >     HTTP
     >      >      >      >     CONNECT tunnels (for HTTP CONNECT requests
     >     received at TCP
     >      >      >     port Y):
     >      >      >      >
     >      >      >      >           http_port Y ssl-bump ...
     >      >      >      >           ssl_bump splice all
     >      >      >      >
     >      >      >      >
     >      >      >      >     In both cases, Squid does not care about the
     >     protocols
     >      >     that
     >      >      >     tunneled
     >      >      >      >     traffic is using. It could be HTTP,
    HTTPS, TLS, or
     >      >     anything
     >      >      >     else on top
     >      >      >      >     of TCP.
     >      >      >      >
     >      >      >      >     Your ACLs may differ from "all" in the above
     >     sketches,
     >      >     of course,
     >      >      >      >     but if
     >      >      >      >     traffic is not TLS, then you want an
    "ssl_bump
     >     splice"
     >      >     rule that
     >      >      >      >     matches
     >      >      >      >     during SslBump step1. A rule with an
    "all" ACLs
     >     is the
     >      >      >     simplest example
     >      >      >      >     of that.
     >      >      >      >
     >      >      >      >
     >      >      >      >     HTH,
     >      >      >      >
     >      >      >      >     Alex.
     >      >      >      >     P.S. I am getting an "Internal Server
    Error" when
     >      >     following
     >      >      >     the haproxy
     >      >      >      >     link in the original question, so I
    cannot map what
     >      >     that page
     >      >      >     says to
     >      >      >      >     the configurations above.
     >      >      >      >
     >      >      >      >
     >      >      >      >      > On Thu, Sep 28, 2023 at 3:41 AM Matus
    UHLAR -
     >      >     fantomas wrote:
     >      >      >      >      >
     >      >      >      >      >     On 27.09.23 16:48, Fernando
    Giorgetti wrote:
     >      >      >      >      >      >I would like to know if it is
    possible
     >     to set up
     >      >      >     Squid to
     >      >      >      >     perform
     >      >      >      >      >      >TLS passthrough to a given backend,
     >     relaying TLS
     >      >      >     encrypted
     >      >      >      >      >      >traffic to the backend,
    similarly to
     >     what HAProxy
     >      >      >     does below?
     >      >      >      >      >      >
     >      >      >      >      >
     >      >      >      >
     >      >      >
     >      >
> >https://www.haproxy.com/documentation/aloha/latest/security/tls/encryption-strategies/#tls-passthrough
     >      >      >      >      >      >
     >      >      >      >      >      >I have tried a few different
     >     configurations using
     >      >      >     reverse
     >      >      >      >     proxy,
     >      >      >      >      >      >or peek and splice, but I could not
     >     make it
     >      >     work without
     >      >      >      >     providing
     >      >      >      >      >      >a valid HTTP request or a
    CONNECT request.
     >      >      >      >      >
     >      >      >      >      >     what's the difference between TCP
     >     redirect and
     >      >     this?
     >      >      >      >      >
     >      >      >      >      >     --
     >      >      >      >      >     Depression is merely anger without
     >     enthusiasm.

_______________________________________________
squid-users mailing list
squid-users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
https://lists.squid-cache.org/listinfo/squid-users




[Index of Archives]     [Linux Audio Users]     [Samba]     [Big List of Linux Books]     [Linux USB]     [Yosemite News]

  Powered by Linux