This older Microsoft compiler does not support mixing declarations and
code and misses some error defines. This commit enables building with
VS2008 by moving up some variable declarations and defining error
codes to their WinSock counterparts in case they're not defined.
Signed-off-by: Christian Beier <info@christianbeier.net>
This allows a big swath of ifdefs to be removed. It also means savings as the db var is not passed around all of the time, and makes it easier to remove the final broker call to mosquitto_time() call in packet_mosq.c. In one test this reduced the calls to mosquitto_time() from 295k to 48k.
Some OpenSSL engines (selectable via tls_engine option) may require a
password to make use of private keys created with them in the first place.
The TPM engine for example, will require a password to access the underlying
TPM's Storage Root Key (SRK), which is the root key of a hierarchy of keys
associated with a TPM; it is generated within a TPM and is a non-migratable
key. Each owned TPM contains a SRK, generated by the TPM at the request
of the Owner. [1]
By default, the engine will prompt the user to introduce the SRK password
before any private keys created with the engine can be used. This could
be inconvenient when running on an unattended system.
Here's where the new tls_engine_kpass_sha option comes in handy. The user
can specify a SHA1 hash of its engine private key password via command
line or config file and it will be passed on to the engine directly.
This commit adds support for both clients (libmosquitto) and broker.
[1] https://goo.gl/qQoXBY
Signed-off-by: Nicolás Pernas Maradei <nicopernas@gmail.com>
- Clients can now offload crypto tasks to an external crypto device through
the OpenSSL ENGINE API.
- The keyfiles can now be treated as PEM or ENGINE keys.
- Two new functions were added to libmosquitto to set up the previously
mentioned features.
- Both mosquitto_sub and mosquitto_pub include support to turn on the mentioned
features through command line options.
Signed-off-by: Nicolás Pernas Maradei <nicopernas@gmail.com>
Adding OCSP Stapling support to mosquitto, so that the TLS client side
requests the certificate status and checks it.
This code uses the OpenSSL-based OCSP implementation and is somewhat
based on the libcurl code for OCSP stapling.
Signed-off-by: Dr. Lars Voelker <lars.voelker@bmw.de>