1. 08 8月, 2003 5 次提交
  2. 18 6月, 2003 1 次提交
  3. 14 6月, 2003 1 次提交
  4. 13 6月, 2003 1 次提交
  5. 09 6月, 2003 1 次提交
  6. 10 5月, 2003 2 次提交
  7. 23 4月, 2003 1 次提交
  8. 22 4月, 2003 1 次提交
  9. 15 4月, 2003 1 次提交
  10. 29 3月, 2003 1 次提交
  11. 03 2月, 2003 1 次提交
  12. 10 1月, 2003 1 次提交
  13. 06 1月, 2003 1 次提交
  14. 14 12月, 2002 1 次提交
  15. 11 12月, 2002 1 次提交
  16. 06 12月, 2002 2 次提交
  17. 05 12月, 2002 1 次提交
  18. 04 9月, 2002 1 次提交
  19. 28 7月, 2002 1 次提交
  20. 18 7月, 2002 1 次提交
  21. 14 6月, 2002 3 次提交
    • B
      UPDATED PATCH: · 19570420
      Bruce Momjian 提交于
      Attached are a revised set of SSL patches.  Many of these patches
      are motivated by security concerns, it's not just bug fixes.  The key
      differences (from stock 7.2.1) are:
      
      *) almost all code that directly uses the OpenSSL library is in two
         new files,
      
           src/interfaces/libpq/fe-ssl.c
           src/backend/postmaster/be-ssl.c
      
         in the long run, it would be nice to merge these two files.
      
      *) the legacy code to read and write network data have been
         encapsulated into read_SSL() and write_SSL().  These functions
         should probably be renamed - they handle both SSL and non-SSL
         cases.
      
         the remaining code should eliminate the problems identified
         earlier, albeit not very cleanly.
      
      *) both front- and back-ends will send a SSL shutdown via the
         new close_SSL() function.  This is necessary for sessions to
         work properly.
      
         (Sessions are not yet fully supported, but by cleanly closing
         the SSL connection instead of just sending a TCP FIN packet
         other SSL tools will be much happier.)
      
      *) The client certificate and key are now expected in a subdirectory
         of the user's home directory.  Specifically,
      
      	- the directory .postgresql must be owned by the user, and
      	  allow no access by 'group' or 'other.'
      
      	- the file .postgresql/postgresql.crt must be a regular file
      	  owned by the user.
      
      	- the file .postgresql/postgresql.key must be a regular file
      	  owned by the user, and allow no access by 'group' or 'other'.
      
         At the current time encrypted private keys are not supported.
         There should also be a way to support multiple client certs/keys.
      
      *) the front-end performs minimal validation of the back-end cert.
         Self-signed certs are permitted, but the common name *must*
         match the hostname used by the front-end.  (The cert itself
         should always use a fully qualified domain name (FDQN) in its
         common name field.)
      
         This means that
      
      	  psql -h eris db
      
         will fail, but
      
      	  psql -h eris.example.com db
      
         will succeed.  At the current time this must be an exact match;
         future patches may support any FQDN that resolves to the address
         returned by getpeername(2).
      
         Another common "problem" is expiring certs.  For now, it may be
         a good idea to use a very-long-lived self-signed cert.
      
         As a compile-time option, the front-end can specify a file
         containing valid root certificates, but it is not yet required.
      
      *) the back-end performs minimal validation of the client cert.
         It allows self-signed certs.  It checks for expiration.  It
         supports a compile-time option specifying a file containing
         valid root certificates.
      
      *) both front- and back-ends default to TLSv1, not SSLv3/SSLv2.
      
      *) both front- and back-ends support DSA keys.  DSA keys are
         moderately more expensive on startup, but many people consider
         them preferable than RSA keys.  (E.g., SSH2 prefers DSA keys.)
      
      *) if /dev/urandom exists, both client and server will read 16k
         of randomization data from it.
      
      *) the server can read empheral DH parameters from the files
      
           $DataDir/dh512.pem
           $DataDir/dh1024.pem
           $DataDir/dh2048.pem
           $DataDir/dh4096.pem
      
         if none are provided, the server will default to hardcoded
         parameter files provided by the OpenSSL project.
      
      Remaining tasks:
      
      *) the select() clauses need to be revisited - the SSL abstraction
         layer may need to absorb more of the current code to avoid rare
         deadlock conditions.  This also touches on a true solution to
         the pg_eof() problem.
      
      *) the SIGPIPE signal handler may need to be revisited.
      
      *) support encrypted private keys.
      
      *) sessions are not yet fully supported.  (SSL sessions can span
         multiple "connections," and allow the client and server to avoid
         costly renegotiations.)
      
      *) makecert - a script that creates back-end certs.
      
      *) pgkeygen - a tool that creates front-end certs.
      
      *) the whole protocol issue, SASL, etc.
      
       *) certs are fully validated - valid root certs must be available.
          This is a hassle, but it means that you *can* trust the identity
          of the server.
      
       *) the client library can handle hardcoded root certificates, to
          avoid the need to copy these files.
      
       *) host name of server cert must resolve to IP address, or be a
          recognized alias.  This is more liberal than the previous
          iteration.
      
       *) the number of bytes transferred is tracked, and the session
          key is periodically renegotiated.
      
       *) basic cert generation scripts (mkcert.sh, pgkeygen.sh).  The
          configuration files have reasonable defaults for each type
          of use.
      
      Bear Giles
      19570420
    • B
      Back out SSL changes. Newer patch available. · eb43af32
      Bruce Momjian 提交于
      eb43af32
    • B
      Attached are a revised set of SSL patches. Many of these patches · a9bd1761
      Bruce Momjian 提交于
      are motivated by security concerns, it's not just bug fixes.  The key
      differences (from stock 7.2.1) are:
      
      *) almost all code that directly uses the OpenSSL library is in two
         new files,
      
           src/interfaces/libpq/fe-ssl.c
           src/backend/postmaster/be-ssl.c
      
         in the long run, it would be nice to merge these two files.
      
      *) the legacy code to read and write network data have been
         encapsulated into read_SSL() and write_SSL().  These functions
         should probably be renamed - they handle both SSL and non-SSL
         cases.
      
         the remaining code should eliminate the problems identified
         earlier, albeit not very cleanly.
      
      *) both front- and back-ends will send a SSL shutdown via the
         new close_SSL() function.  This is necessary for sessions to
         work properly.
      
         (Sessions are not yet fully supported, but by cleanly closing
         the SSL connection instead of just sending a TCP FIN packet
         other SSL tools will be much happier.)
      
      *) The client certificate and key are now expected in a subdirectory
         of the user's home directory.  Specifically,
      
      	- the directory .postgresql must be owned by the user, and
      	  allow no access by 'group' or 'other.'
      
      	- the file .postgresql/postgresql.crt must be a regular file
      	  owned by the user.
      
      	- the file .postgresql/postgresql.key must be a regular file
      	  owned by the user, and allow no access by 'group' or 'other'.
      
         At the current time encrypted private keys are not supported.
         There should also be a way to support multiple client certs/keys.
      
      *) the front-end performs minimal validation of the back-end cert.
         Self-signed certs are permitted, but the common name *must*
         match the hostname used by the front-end.  (The cert itself
         should always use a fully qualified domain name (FDQN) in its
         common name field.)
      
         This means that
      
      	  psql -h eris db
      
         will fail, but
      
      	  psql -h eris.example.com db
      
         will succeed.  At the current time this must be an exact match;
         future patches may support any FQDN that resolves to the address
         returned by getpeername(2).
      
         Another common "problem" is expiring certs.  For now, it may be
         a good idea to use a very-long-lived self-signed cert.
      
         As a compile-time option, the front-end can specify a file
         containing valid root certificates, but it is not yet required.
      
      *) the back-end performs minimal validation of the client cert.
         It allows self-signed certs.  It checks for expiration.  It
         supports a compile-time option specifying a file containing
         valid root certificates.
      
      *) both front- and back-ends default to TLSv1, not SSLv3/SSLv2.
      
      *) both front- and back-ends support DSA keys.  DSA keys are
         moderately more expensive on startup, but many people consider
         them preferable than RSA keys.  (E.g., SSH2 prefers DSA keys.)
      
      *) if /dev/urandom exists, both client and server will read 16k
         of randomization data from it.
      
      *) the server can read empheral DH parameters from the files
      
           $DataDir/dh512.pem
           $DataDir/dh1024.pem
           $DataDir/dh2048.pem
           $DataDir/dh4096.pem
      
         if none are provided, the server will default to hardcoded
         parameter files provided by the OpenSSL project.
      
      Remaining tasks:
      
      *) the select() clauses need to be revisited - the SSL abstraction
         layer may need to absorb more of the current code to avoid rare
         deadlock conditions.  This also touches on a true solution to
         the pg_eof() problem.
      
      *) the SIGPIPE signal handler may need to be revisited.
      
      *) support encrypted private keys.
      
      *) sessions are not yet fully supported.  (SSL sessions can span
         multiple "connections," and allow the client and server to avoid
         costly renegotiations.)
      
      *) makecert - a script that creates back-end certs.
      
      *) pgkeygen - a tool that creates front-end certs.
      
      *) the whole protocol issue, SASL, etc.
      
       *) certs are fully validated - valid root certs must be available.
          This is a hassle, but it means that you *can* trust the identity
          of the server.
      
       *) the client library can handle hardcoded root certificates, to
          avoid the need to copy these files.
      
       *) host name of server cert must resolve to IP address, or be a
          recognized alias.  This is more liberal than the previous
          iteration.
      
       *) the number of bytes transferred is tracked, and the session
          key is periodically renegotiated.
      
       *) basic cert generation scripts (mkcert.sh, pgkeygen.sh).  The
          configuration files have reasonable defaults for each type
          of use.
      
      Bear Giles
      a9bd1761
  22. 23 9月, 2001 1 次提交
    • P
      Provide some initial support for building the ODBC driver for · 364a7ebe
      Peter Eisentraut 提交于
      an already installed iODBC or unixODBC driver manager.  In particular,
      use the include files provided by the driver manager over our own,
      and use the odbcinst library of the driver manager rather than gpps.c.
      
      Migrate portability sections common to several files into psqlodbc.h.
      364a7ebe
  23. 22 9月, 2001 1 次提交
  24. 06 9月, 2001 1 次提交
    • T
      Commit Karel's patch. · 22776711
      Tatsuo Ishii 提交于
      -------------------------------------------------------------------
      Subject: Re: [PATCHES] encoding names
      From: Karel Zak <zakkr@zf.jcu.cz>
      To: Peter Eisentraut <peter_e@gmx.net>
      Cc: pgsql-patches <pgsql-patches@postgresql.org>
      Date: Fri, 31 Aug 2001 17:24:38 +0200
      
      On Thu, Aug 30, 2001 at 01:30:40AM +0200, Peter Eisentraut wrote:
      > > 		- convert encoding 'name' to 'id'
      >
      > I thought we decided not to add functions returning "new" names until we
      > know exactly what the new names should be, and pending schema
      
       Ok, the patch not to add functions.
      
      > better
      >
      >     ...(): encoding name too long
      
       Fixed.
      
       I found new bug in command/variable.c in parse_client_encoding(), nobody
      probably never see this error:
      
      if (pg_set_client_encoding(encoding))
      {
      	elog(ERROR, "Conversion between %s and %s is not supported",
                           value, GetDatabaseEncodingName());
      }
      
      because pg_set_client_encoding() returns -1 for error and 0 as true.
      It's fixed too.
      
       IMHO it can be apply.
      
      		Karel
      PS:
      
          * following files are renamed:
      
      src/utils/mb/Unicode/KOI8_to_utf8.map  -->
              src/utils/mb/Unicode/koi8r_to_utf8.map
      
      src/utils/mb/Unicode/WIN_to_utf8.map  -->
              src/utils/mb/Unicode/win1251_to_utf8.map
      
      src/utils/mb/Unicode/utf8_to_KOI8.map -->
              src/utils/mb/Unicode/utf8_to_koi8r.map
      
      src/utils/mb/Unicode/utf8_to_WIN.map -->
              src/utils/mb/Unicode/utf8_to_win1251.map
      
         * new file:
      
      src/utils/mb/encname.c
      
         * removed file:
      
      src/utils/mb/common.c
      
      --
       Karel Zak  <zakkr@zf.jcu.cz>
       http://home.zf.jcu.cz/~zakkr/
      
       C, PostgreSQL, PHP, WWW, http://docs.linux.cz, http://mape.jcu.cz
      22776711
  25. 28 8月, 2001 1 次提交
    • P
      Include directory rearrangement · f5944af8
      Peter Eisentraut 提交于
      Client headers are no longer in a subdirectory, since they have been made
      namespace-clean.
      
      Internal libpq headers are in a private subdirectory.
      
      Server headers are in a private subdirectory.  pg_config has a new option
      to point there.
      f5944af8
  26. 16 8月, 2001 2 次提交
  27. 15 7月, 2001 1 次提交
  28. 11 5月, 2001 1 次提交
  29. 21 2月, 2001 1 次提交
  30. 11 2月, 2001 1 次提交
  31. 04 2月, 2001 1 次提交