Mercurial > hg > nginx-quic
view src/core/ngx_md5.c @ 7335:fbb683496705
HTTP/2: workaround for clients which fail on table size updates.
There are clients which cannot handle HPACK's dynamic table size updates
as added in 12cadc4669a7 (1.13.6). Notably, old versions of OkHttp library
are known to fail on it (ticket #1397).
This change makes it possible to work with such clients by only sending
dynamic table size updates in response to SETTINGS_HEADER_TABLE_SIZE. As
a downside, clients which do not use SETTINGS_HEADER_TABLE_SIZE will
continue to maintain default 4k table.
author | Maxim Dounin <mdounin@mdounin.ru> |
---|---|
date | Thu, 09 Aug 2018 20:12:17 +0300 |
parents | 9eefb38f0005 |
children |
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/* * An internal implementation, based on Alexander Peslyak's * public domain implementation: * http://openwall.info/wiki/people/solar/software/public-domain-source-code/md5 */ #include <ngx_config.h> #include <ngx_core.h> #include <ngx_md5.h> static const u_char *ngx_md5_body(ngx_md5_t *ctx, const u_char *data, size_t size); void ngx_md5_init(ngx_md5_t *ctx) { ctx->a = 0x67452301; ctx->b = 0xefcdab89; ctx->c = 0x98badcfe; ctx->d = 0x10325476; ctx->bytes = 0; } void ngx_md5_update(ngx_md5_t *ctx, const void *data, size_t size) { size_t used, free; used = (size_t) (ctx->bytes & 0x3f); ctx->bytes += size; if (used) { free = 64 - used; if (size < free) { ngx_memcpy(&ctx->buffer[used], data, size); return; } ngx_memcpy(&ctx->buffer[used], data, free); data = (u_char *) data + free; size -= free; (void) ngx_md5_body(ctx, ctx->buffer, 64); } if (size >= 64) { data = ngx_md5_body(ctx, data, size & ~(size_t) 0x3f); size &= 0x3f; } ngx_memcpy(ctx->buffer, data, size); } void ngx_md5_final(u_char result[16], ngx_md5_t *ctx) { size_t used, free; used = (size_t) (ctx->bytes & 0x3f); ctx->buffer[used++] = 0x80; free = 64 - used; if (free < 8) { ngx_memzero(&ctx->buffer[used], free); (void) ngx_md5_body(ctx, ctx->buffer, 64); used = 0; free = 64; } ngx_memzero(&ctx->buffer[used], free - 8); ctx->bytes <<= 3; ctx->buffer[56] = (u_char) ctx->bytes; ctx->buffer[57] = (u_char) (ctx->bytes >> 8); ctx->buffer[58] = (u_char) (ctx->bytes >> 16); ctx->buffer[59] = (u_char) (ctx->bytes >> 24); ctx->buffer[60] = (u_char) (ctx->bytes >> 32); ctx->buffer[61] = (u_char) (ctx->bytes >> 40); ctx->buffer[62] = (u_char) (ctx->bytes >> 48); ctx->buffer[63] = (u_char) (ctx->bytes >> 56); (void) ngx_md5_body(ctx, ctx->buffer, 64); result[0] = (u_char) ctx->a; result[1] = (u_char) (ctx->a >> 8); result[2] = (u_char) (ctx->a >> 16); result[3] = (u_char) (ctx->a >> 24); result[4] = (u_char) ctx->b; result[5] = (u_char) (ctx->b >> 8); result[6] = (u_char) (ctx->b >> 16); result[7] = (u_char) (ctx->b >> 24); result[8] = (u_char) ctx->c; result[9] = (u_char) (ctx->c >> 8); result[10] = (u_char) (ctx->c >> 16); result[11] = (u_char) (ctx->c >> 24); result[12] = (u_char) ctx->d; result[13] = (u_char) (ctx->d >> 8); result[14] = (u_char) (ctx->d >> 16); result[15] = (u_char) (ctx->d >> 24); ngx_memzero(ctx, sizeof(*ctx)); } /* * The basic MD5 functions. * * F and G are optimized compared to their RFC 1321 definitions for * architectures that lack an AND-NOT instruction, just like in * Colin Plumb's implementation. */ #define F(x, y, z) ((z) ^ ((x) & ((y) ^ (z)))) #define G(x, y, z) ((y) ^ ((z) & ((x) ^ (y)))) #define H(x, y, z) ((x) ^ (y) ^ (z)) #define I(x, y, z) ((y) ^ ((x) | ~(z))) /* * The MD5 transformation for all four rounds. */ #define STEP(f, a, b, c, d, x, t, s) \ (a) += f((b), (c), (d)) + (x) + (t); \ (a) = (((a) << (s)) | (((a) & 0xffffffff) >> (32 - (s)))); \ (a) += (b) /* * SET() reads 4 input bytes in little-endian byte order and stores them * in a properly aligned word in host byte order. * * The check for little-endian architectures that tolerate unaligned * memory accesses is just an optimization. Nothing will break if it * does not work. */ #if (NGX_HAVE_LITTLE_ENDIAN && NGX_HAVE_NONALIGNED) #define SET(n) (*(uint32_t *) &p[n * 4]) #define GET(n) (*(uint32_t *) &p[n * 4]) #else #define SET(n) \ (block[n] = \ (uint32_t) p[n * 4] | \ ((uint32_t) p[n * 4 + 1] << 8) | \ ((uint32_t) p[n * 4 + 2] << 16) | \ ((uint32_t) p[n * 4 + 3] << 24)) #define GET(n) block[n] #endif /* * This processes one or more 64-byte data blocks, but does not update * the bit counters. There are no alignment requirements. */ static const u_char * ngx_md5_body(ngx_md5_t *ctx, const u_char *data, size_t size) { uint32_t a, b, c, d; uint32_t saved_a, saved_b, saved_c, saved_d; const u_char *p; #if !(NGX_HAVE_LITTLE_ENDIAN && NGX_HAVE_NONALIGNED) uint32_t block[16]; #endif p = data; a = ctx->a; b = ctx->b; c = ctx->c; d = ctx->d; do { saved_a = a; saved_b = b; saved_c = c; saved_d = d; /* Round 1 */ STEP(F, a, b, c, d, SET(0), 0xd76aa478, 7); STEP(F, d, a, b, c, SET(1), 0xe8c7b756, 12); STEP(F, c, d, a, b, SET(2), 0x242070db, 17); STEP(F, b, c, d, a, SET(3), 0xc1bdceee, 22); STEP(F, a, b, c, d, SET(4), 0xf57c0faf, 7); STEP(F, d, a, b, c, SET(5), 0x4787c62a, 12); STEP(F, c, d, a, b, SET(6), 0xa8304613, 17); STEP(F, b, c, d, a, SET(7), 0xfd469501, 22); STEP(F, a, b, c, d, SET(8), 0x698098d8, 7); STEP(F, d, a, b, c, SET(9), 0x8b44f7af, 12); STEP(F, c, d, a, b, SET(10), 0xffff5bb1, 17); STEP(F, b, c, d, a, SET(11), 0x895cd7be, 22); STEP(F, a, b, c, d, SET(12), 0x6b901122, 7); STEP(F, d, a, b, c, SET(13), 0xfd987193, 12); STEP(F, c, d, a, b, SET(14), 0xa679438e, 17); STEP(F, b, c, d, a, SET(15), 0x49b40821, 22); /* Round 2 */ STEP(G, a, b, c, d, GET(1), 0xf61e2562, 5); STEP(G, d, a, b, c, GET(6), 0xc040b340, 9); STEP(G, c, d, a, b, GET(11), 0x265e5a51, 14); STEP(G, b, c, d, a, GET(0), 0xe9b6c7aa, 20); STEP(G, a, b, c, d, GET(5), 0xd62f105d, 5); STEP(G, d, a, b, c, GET(10), 0x02441453, 9); STEP(G, c, d, a, b, GET(15), 0xd8a1e681, 14); STEP(G, b, c, d, a, GET(4), 0xe7d3fbc8, 20); STEP(G, a, b, c, d, GET(9), 0x21e1cde6, 5); STEP(G, d, a, b, c, GET(14), 0xc33707d6, 9); STEP(G, c, d, a, b, GET(3), 0xf4d50d87, 14); STEP(G, b, c, d, a, GET(8), 0x455a14ed, 20); STEP(G, a, b, c, d, GET(13), 0xa9e3e905, 5); STEP(G, d, a, b, c, GET(2), 0xfcefa3f8, 9); STEP(G, c, d, a, b, GET(7), 0x676f02d9, 14); STEP(G, b, c, d, a, GET(12), 0x8d2a4c8a, 20); /* Round 3 */ STEP(H, a, b, c, d, GET(5), 0xfffa3942, 4); STEP(H, d, a, b, c, GET(8), 0x8771f681, 11); STEP(H, c, d, a, b, GET(11), 0x6d9d6122, 16); STEP(H, b, c, d, a, GET(14), 0xfde5380c, 23); STEP(H, a, b, c, d, GET(1), 0xa4beea44, 4); STEP(H, d, a, b, c, GET(4), 0x4bdecfa9, 11); STEP(H, c, d, a, b, GET(7), 0xf6bb4b60, 16); STEP(H, b, c, d, a, GET(10), 0xbebfbc70, 23); STEP(H, a, b, c, d, GET(13), 0x289b7ec6, 4); STEP(H, d, a, b, c, GET(0), 0xeaa127fa, 11); STEP(H, c, d, a, b, GET(3), 0xd4ef3085, 16); STEP(H, b, c, d, a, GET(6), 0x04881d05, 23); STEP(H, a, b, c, d, GET(9), 0xd9d4d039, 4); STEP(H, d, a, b, c, GET(12), 0xe6db99e5, 11); STEP(H, c, d, a, b, GET(15), 0x1fa27cf8, 16); STEP(H, b, c, d, a, GET(2), 0xc4ac5665, 23); /* Round 4 */ STEP(I, a, b, c, d, GET(0), 0xf4292244, 6); STEP(I, d, a, b, c, GET(7), 0x432aff97, 10); STEP(I, c, d, a, b, GET(14), 0xab9423a7, 15); STEP(I, b, c, d, a, GET(5), 0xfc93a039, 21); STEP(I, a, b, c, d, GET(12), 0x655b59c3, 6); STEP(I, d, a, b, c, GET(3), 0x8f0ccc92, 10); STEP(I, c, d, a, b, GET(10), 0xffeff47d, 15); STEP(I, b, c, d, a, GET(1), 0x85845dd1, 21); STEP(I, a, b, c, d, GET(8), 0x6fa87e4f, 6); STEP(I, d, a, b, c, GET(15), 0xfe2ce6e0, 10); STEP(I, c, d, a, b, GET(6), 0xa3014314, 15); STEP(I, b, c, d, a, GET(13), 0x4e0811a1, 21); STEP(I, a, b, c, d, GET(4), 0xf7537e82, 6); STEP(I, d, a, b, c, GET(11), 0xbd3af235, 10); STEP(I, c, d, a, b, GET(2), 0x2ad7d2bb, 15); STEP(I, b, c, d, a, GET(9), 0xeb86d391, 21); a += saved_a; b += saved_b; c += saved_c; d += saved_d; p += 64; } while (size -= 64); ctx->a = a; ctx->b = b; ctx->c = c; ctx->d = d; return p; }