Historically, the MD5 checksums in our LFS files serve as a protection
against broken downloads, or accidentally corrupted source files.
While the sources are nowadays downloaded via HTTPS, it make sense to
beef up integrity protection for them, since transparently intercepting
TLS is believed to be feasible for more powerful actors, and the state
of the public PKI ecosystem is clearly not helping.
Therefore, this patch switches from MD5 to BLAKE2, updating all LFS
files as well as make.sh to deal with this checksum algorithm. BLAKE2 is
notably faster (and more secure) than SHA2, so the performance penalty
introduced by this patch is negligible, if noticeable at all.
In preparation of this patch, the toolchain files currently used have
been supplied with BLAKE2 checksums as well on
https://source.ipfire.org/.
Cc: Michael Tremer <michael.tremer@ipfire.org>
Signed-off-by: Peter Müller <peter.mueller@ipfire.org>
Acked-by: Michael Tremer <michael.tremeripfire.org>
For details see:
https://w1.fi/cgit/hostap/plain/wpa_supplicant/ChangeLog
"2022-01-16 - v2.10
* SAE changes
- improved protection against side channel attacks
[https://w1.fi/security/2022-1/]
- added support for the hash-to-element mechanism (sae_pwe=1 or
sae_pwe=2); this is currently disabled by default, but will likely
get enabled by default in the future
- fixed PMKSA caching with OKC
- added support for SAE-PK
* EAP-pwd changes
- improved protection against side channel attacks
[https://w1.fi/security/2022-1/]
* fixed P2P provision discovery processing of a specially constructed
invalid frame
[https://w1.fi/security/2021-1/]
* fixed P2P group information processing of a specially constructed
invalid frame
[https://w1.fi/security/2020-2/]
* fixed PMF disconnection protection bypass in AP mode
[https://w1.fi/security/2019-7/]
* added support for using OpenSSL 3.0
* increased the maximum number of EAP message exchanges (mainly to
support cases with very large certificates)
* fixed various issues in experimental support for EAP-TEAP peer
* added support for DPP release 2 (Wi-Fi Device Provisioning Protocol)
* a number of MKA/MACsec fixes and extensions
* added support for SAE (WPA3-Personal) AP mode configuration
* added P2P support for EDMG (IEEE 802.11ay) channels
* fixed EAP-FAST peer with TLS GCM/CCM ciphers
* improved throughput estimation and BSS selection
* dropped support for libnl 1.1
* added support for nl80211 control port for EAPOL frame TX/RX
* fixed OWE key derivation with groups 20 and 21; this breaks backwards
compatibility for these groups while the default group 19 remains
backwards compatible
* added support for Beacon protection
* added support for Extended Key ID for pairwise keys
* removed WEP support from the default build (CONFIG_WEP=y can be used
to enable it, if really needed)
* added a build option to remove TKIP support (CONFIG_NO_TKIP=y)
* added support for Transition Disable mechanism to allow the AP to
automatically disable transition mode to improve security
* extended D-Bus interface
* added support for PASN
* added a file-based backend for external password storage to allow
secret information to be moved away from the main configuration file
without requiring external tools
* added EAP-TLS peer support for TLS 1.3 (disabled by default for now)
* added support for SCS, MSCS, DSCP policy
* changed driver interface selection to default to automatic fallback
to other compiled in options
* a large number of other fixes, cleanup, and extensions"
Signed-off-by: Matthias Fischer <matthias.fischer@ipfire.org>
Reviewed-by: Peter Müller <peter.mueller@ipfire.org>
Most of these files still used old dates and/or domain names for contact
mail addresses. This is now replaced by an up-to-date copyright line.
Just some housekeeping... :-)
Signed-off-by: Peter Müller <peter.mueller@link38.eu>
Signed-off-by: Michael Tremer <michael.tremer@ipfire.org>
A vulnerability was found in how a number of implementations can be
triggered to reconfigure WPA/WPA2/RSN keys (TK, GTK, or IGTK) by
replaying a specific frame that is used to manage the keys. Such
reinstallation of the encryption key can result in two different types
of vulnerabilities: disabling replay protection and significantly
reducing the security of encryption to the point of allowing frames to
be decrypted or some parts of the keys to be determined by an attacker
depending on which cipher is used.
This fixes: CVE-2017-13077, CVE-2017-13078, CVE-2017-13079,
CVE-2017-13080, CVE-2017-13081, CVE-2017-13082, CVE-2017-13086,
CVE-2017-13087, CVE-2017-13088
Signed-off-by: Michael Tremer <michael.tremer@ipfire.org>