NEWS 151 KB

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  1. strongswan-5.8.1
  2. ----------------
  3. - RDNs in Distinguished Names can now optionally be matched less strict. The
  4. global option charon.rdn_matching takes two alternative values that cause the
  5. matching algorithm to either ignore the order of matched RDNs or additionally
  6. accept DNs that contain more RDNs than configured (unmatched RDNs are treated
  7. like wildcard matches).
  8. - The updown plugin now passes the same interface to the script that is also
  9. used for the automatically installed routes, i.e. the interface over which the
  10. peer is reached instead of the interface on which the local address is found.
  11. - TPM 2.0 contexts are now protected by a mutex to prevent issues if multiple
  12. IKE_SAs use the same private key concurrently.
  13. strongswan-5.8.0
  14. ----------------
  15. - The systemd service units have been renamed. The modern unit, which was called
  16. strongswan-swanctl, is now called strongswan (the previous name is configured
  17. as alias). The legacy unit is now called strongswan-starter.
  18. - Support for XFRM interfaces (available since Linux 4.19) has been added.
  19. Configuration is possible via swanctl.conf. Interfaces may be created
  20. dynamically via updown/vici scripts, or statically before or after
  21. establishing the SAs. Routes must be added manually as needed (the daemon will
  22. not install any routes for outbound policies with an interface ID).
  23. - Initiation of childless IKE_SAs is supported (RFC 6023). If enabled and
  24. supported by the responder, no CHILD_SA is established during IKE_AUTH. This
  25. allows using a separate DH exchange even for the first CHILD_SA, which is
  26. otherwise created with keys derived from the IKE_SA's key material.
  27. - The NetworkManager backend and plugin support IPv6.
  28. - The new wolfssl plugin is a wrapper around the wolfSSL crypto library. Thanks
  29. to Sean Parkinson of wolfSSL Inc. for the initial patch.
  30. - IKE SPIs may optionally be labeled via the charon.spi_mask|label options. This
  31. feature was extracted from charon-tkm, however, now applies the mask/label in
  32. network order.
  33. - The openssl plugin supports ChaCha20-Poly1305 when built with OpenSSL 1.1.0.
  34. - The PB-TNC finite state machine according to section 3.2 of RFC 5793 was not
  35. correctly implemented when sending either a CRETRY or SRETRY batch. These
  36. batches can only be sent in the "Decided" state and a CRETRY batch can
  37. immediately carry all messages usually transported by a CDATA batch. It is
  38. currently not possible to send a SRETRY batch since full-duplex mode for
  39. PT-TLS transport is not supported.
  40. - Instead of marking virtual IPv6 addresses as deprecated, the kernel-netlink
  41. plugin uses address labels to avoid their use for non-VPN traffic.
  42. - The agent plugin creates sockets to the ssh/gpg-agent dynamically and does not
  43. keep them open, which otherwise can prevent the agent from getting terminated.
  44. - To avoid broadcast loops the forecast plugin now only reinjects packets that
  45. are marked or received from the configured interface.
  46. - UTF-8 encoded passwords are supported via EAP-MSCHAPv2, which internally uses
  47. an UTF-16LE encoding to calculate the NT hash.
  48. - Adds the build-certs script to generate the keys and certificates used for
  49. regression tests dynamically. They are built with the pki version installed
  50. in the KVM root image so it's not necessary to have an up-to-date version with
  51. all required plugins installed on the host system.
  52. strongswan-5.7.2
  53. ----------------
  54. - Private key implementations may optionally provide a list of supported
  55. signature schemes, which is used by the tpm plugin because for each key on a
  56. TPM 2.0 the hash algorithm and for RSA also the padding scheme is predefined.
  57. - For RSA with PSS padding, the TPM 2.0 specification mandates the maximum salt
  58. length (as defined by the length of the key and hash). However, if the TPM is
  59. FIPS-168-4 compliant, the salt length equals the hash length. This is assumed
  60. for FIPS-140-2 compliant TPMs, but if that's not the case, it might be
  61. necessary to manually enable charon.plugins.tpm.fips_186_4 if the TPM doesn't
  62. use the maximum salt length.
  63. - swanctl now accesses directories for credentials relative to swanctl.conf, in
  64. particular, when it's loaded from a custom location via --file argument. The
  65. base directory that's used if --file is not given is configurable at runtime
  66. via SWANCTL_DIR environment variable.
  67. - With RADIUS Accounting enabled, the eap-radius plugin adds the session ID to
  68. Access-Request messages, simplifying associating database entries for IP
  69. leases and accounting with sessions.
  70. - IPs assigned by RADIUS servers are included in Accounting-Stop even if clients
  71. don't claim them, allowing releasing them early on connection errors.
  72. - Selectors installed on transport mode SAs by the kernel-netlink plugin are
  73. updated on IP address changes (e.g. via MOBIKE).
  74. - Added support for RSA signatures with SHA-256 and SHA-512 to the agent plugin.
  75. For older versions of ssh/gpg-agent that only support SHA-1, IKEv2 signature
  76. authentication has to be disabled via charon.signature_authentication.
  77. - The sshkey and agent plugins support Ed25519/Ed448 SSH keys and signatures.
  78. - The openssl plugin supports X25519/X448 Diffie-Hellman and Ed25519/Ed448 keys
  79. and signatures when built against OpenSSL 1.1.1.
  80. - Ed25519, ChaCha20/Poly1305, SHA-3 and AES-CCM were added to the botan plugin.
  81. - The mysql plugin now properly handles database connections with transactions
  82. under heavy load.
  83. - IP addresses in HA pools are now distributed evenly among all segments.
  84. - On newer FreeBSD kernels, the kernel-pfkey plugin reads the reqid directly
  85. from SADB_ACQUIRE messages, i.e. not requiring previous policy installation by
  86. the plugin, e.g. for compatibility with if_ipsec(4) VTIs.
  87. strongswan-5.7.1
  88. ----------------
  89. - Fixes a vulnerability in the gmp plugin triggered by crafted certificates with
  90. RSA keys with very small moduli. When verifying signatures with such keys,
  91. the code patched with the fix for CVE-2018-16151/2 caused an integer underflow
  92. and subsequent heap buffer overflow that results in a crash of the daemon.
  93. The vulnerability has been registered as CVE-2018-17540.
  94. strongswan-5.7.0
  95. ----------------
  96. - Fixes a potential authorization bypass vulnerability in the gmp plugin that
  97. was caused by a too lenient verification of PKCS#1 v1.5 signatures. Several
  98. flaws could be exploited by a Bleichenbacher-style attack to forge signatures
  99. for low-exponent keys (i.e. with e=3). CVE-2018-16151 has been assigned to
  100. the problem of accepting random bytes after the OID of the hash function in
  101. such signatures, and CVE-2018-16152 has been assigned to the issue of not
  102. verifying that the parameters in the ASN.1 algorithmIdentitifer structure is
  103. empty. Other flaws that don't lead to a vulnerability directly (e.g. not
  104. checking for at least 8 bytes of padding) have no separate CVE assigned.
  105. - Dots are not allowed anymore in section names in swanctl.conf and
  106. strongswan.conf. This mainly affects the configuration of file loggers. If the
  107. path for such a log file contains dots it now has to be configured in the new
  108. `path` setting within the arbitrarily renamed subsection in the `filelog`
  109. section.
  110. - Sections in swanctl.conf and strongswan.conf may now reference other sections.
  111. All settings and subsections from such a section are inherited. This allows
  112. to simplify configs as redundant information has only to be specified once
  113. and may then be included in other sections (refer to the example in the man
  114. page for strongswan.conf).
  115. - The originally selected IKE config (based on the IPs and IKE version) can now
  116. change if no matching algorithm proposal is found. This way the order
  117. of the configs doesn't matter that much anymore and it's easily possible to
  118. specify separate configs for clients that require weak algorithms (instead
  119. of having to also add them in other configs that might be selected).
  120. - Support for Postquantum Preshared Keys for IKEv2 (draft-ietf-ipsecme-qr-ikev2)
  121. has been added.
  122. - The new botan plugin is a wrapper around the Botan C++ crypto library. It
  123. requires a fairly recent build from Botan's master branch (or the upcoming
  124. 2.8.0 release). Thanks to René Korthaus and his team from Rohde & Schwarz
  125. Cybersecurity for the initial patch.
  126. - The pki tool accepts a xmppAddr otherName as a subjectAlternativeName using
  127. the syntax --san xmppaddr:<jid>.
  128. - Implementation of RFC 8412 "Software Inventory Message and Attributes (SWIMA)
  129. for PA-TNC". SWIMA subscription option sets CLOSE_WRITE trigger on apt
  130. history.log file resulting in a ClientRetry PB-TNC batch to initialize
  131. a new measurement cycle.
  132. - Added support for fuzzing the PA-TNC (RFC 5792) and PB-TNC (RFC 5793) NEA
  133. protocols on Google's OSS-Fuzz infrastructure.
  134. - Support for version 2 of Intel's TPM2-TSS TGC Software Stack. The presence of
  135. the in-kernel /dev/tpmrm0 resource manager is automatically detected.
  136. - Marks the in- and/or outbound SA should apply to packets after processing may
  137. be configured in swanctl.conf on Linux. For outbound SAs this requires at
  138. least a 4.14 kernel. Setting a mask and configuring a mark/mask for inbound
  139. SAs will be added with the upcoming 4.19 kernel.
  140. - New options in swanctl.conf allow configuring how/whether DF, ECN and DS
  141. fields in the IP headers are copied during IPsec processing. Controlling this
  142. is currently only possible on Linux.
  143. - To avoid conflicts, the dhcp plugin now only uses the DHCP server port if
  144. explicitly configured.
  145. strongswan-5.6.3
  146. ----------------
  147. - Fixed a DoS vulnerability in the IKEv2 key derivation if the openssl plugin is
  148. used in FIPS mode and HMAC-MD5 is negotiated as PRF.
  149. This vulnerability has been registered as CVE-2018-10811.
  150. - Fixed a vulnerability in the stroke plugin, which did not check the received
  151. length before reading a message from the socket. Unless a group is configured,
  152. root privileges are required to access that socket, so in the default
  153. configuration this shouldn't be an issue.
  154. This vulnerability has been registered as CVE-2018-5388.
  155. ⁻ CRLs that are not yet valid are now ignored to avoid problems in scenarios
  156. where expired certificates are removed from CRLs and the clock on the host
  157. doing the revocation check is trailing behind that of the host issuing CRLs.
  158. - The issuer of fetched CRLs is now compared to the issuer of the checked
  159. certificate.
  160. - CRL validation results other than revocation (e.g. a skipped check because
  161. the CRL couldn't be fetched) are now stored also for intermediate CA
  162. certificates and not only for end-entity certificates, so a strict CRL policy
  163. can be enforced in such cases.
  164. - In compliance with RFC 4945, section 5.1.3.2, certificates used for IKE must
  165. now either not contain a keyUsage extension (like the ones generated by pki)
  166. or have at least one of the digitalSignature or nonRepudiation bits set.
  167. - New options for vici/swanctl allow forcing the local termination of an IKE_SA.
  168. This might be useful in situations where it's known the other end is not
  169. reachable anymore, or that it already removed the IKE_SA, so retransmitting a
  170. DELETE and waiting for a response would be pointless. Waiting only a certain
  171. amount of time for a response before destroying the IKE_SA is also possible
  172. by additionally specifying a timeout.
  173. - When removing routes, the kernel-netlink plugin now checks if it tracks other
  174. routes for the same destination and replaces the installed route instead of
  175. just removing it. Same during installation, where existing routes previously
  176. weren't replaced. This should allow using traps with virtual IPs on Linux.
  177. - The dhcp plugin only sends the client identifier option if identity_lease is
  178. enabled. It can also send identities of up to 255 bytes length, instead of
  179. the previous 64 bytes. If a server address is configured, DHCP requests are
  180. now sent from port 67 instead of 68 to avoid ICMP port unreachables.
  181. - Roam events are now completely ignored for IKEv1 SAs.
  182. - ChaCha20/Poly1305 is now correctly proposed without key length. For
  183. compatibility with older releases the chacha20poly1305compat keyword may be
  184. included in proposals to also propose the algorithm with a key length.
  185. - Configuration of hardware offload of IPsec SAs is now more flexible and allows
  186. a new mode, which automatically uses it if the kernel and device support it.
  187. - SHA-2 based PRFs are supported in PKCS#8 files as generated by OpenSSL 1.1.
  188. - The pki --verify tool may load CA certificates and CRLs from directories.
  189. - Fixed an issue with DNS servers passed to NetworkManager in charon-nm.
  190. strongswan-5.6.2
  191. ----------------
  192. - Fixed a DoS vulnerability in the parser for PKCS#1 RSASSA-PSS signatures that
  193. was caused by insufficient input validation. One of the configurable
  194. parameters in algorithm identifier structures for RSASSA-PSS signatures is the
  195. mask generation function (MGF). Only MGF1 is currently specified for this
  196. purpose. However, this in turn takes itself a parameter that specifies the
  197. underlying hash function. strongSwan's parser did not correctly handle the
  198. case of this parameter being absent, causing an undefined data read.
  199. This vulnerability has been registered as CVE-2018-6459.
  200. - The previously negotiated DH group is reused when rekeying an SA, instead of
  201. using the first group in the configured proposals, which avoids an additional
  202. exchange if the peer selected a different group via INVALID_KE_PAYLOAD when
  203. the SA was created initially.
  204. The selected DH group is also moved to the front of all sent proposals that
  205. contain it and all proposals that don't are moved to the back in order to
  206. convey the preference for this group to the peer.
  207. - Handling of MOBIKE task queuing has been improved. In particular, the response
  208. to an address update is not ignored anymore if only an address list update or
  209. DPD is queued.
  210. - The fallback drop policies installed to avoid traffic leaks when replacing
  211. addresses in installed policies are now replaced by temporary drop policies,
  212. which also prevent acquires because we currently delete and reinstall IPsec
  213. SAs to update their addresses.
  214. - Access X.509 certificates held in non-volatile storage of a TPM 2.0
  215. referenced via the NV index.
  216. - Adding the --keyid parameter to pki --print allows to print private keys
  217. or certificates stored in a smartcard or a TPM 2.0.
  218. - Fixed proposal selection if a peer incorrectly sends DH groups in the ESP
  219. proposals during IKE_AUTH and also if a DH group is configured in the local
  220. ESP proposal and charon.prefer_configured_proposals is disabled.
  221. - MSKs received via RADIUS are now padded to 64 bytes to avoid compatibility
  222. issues with EAP-MSCHAPv2 and PRFs that have a block size < 64 bytes (e.g.
  223. AES-XCBC-PRF-128).
  224. - The tpm_extendpcr command line tool extends a digest into a TPM PCR.
  225. - Ported the NetworkManager backend from the deprecated libnm-glib to libnm.
  226. - The save-keys debugging/development plugin saves IKE and/or ESP keys to files
  227. compatible with Wireshark.
  228. strongswan-5.6.1
  229. ----------------
  230. - In compliance with RFCs 8221 and 8247 several algorithms were removed from the
  231. default ESP/AH and IKEv2 proposals, respectively (3DES, Blowfish and MD5 from
  232. ESP/AH, MD5 and MODP-1024 from IKEv2). These algorithms may still be used in
  233. custom proposals.
  234. - Added support for RSASSA-PSS signatures. For backwards compatibility they are
  235. not used automatically by default, enable charon.rsa_pss to change that. To
  236. explicitly use or require such signatures with IKEv2 signature authentication
  237. (RFC 7427), regardless of whether that option is enabled, use ike:rsa/pss...
  238. authentication constraints.
  239. - The pki tool can optionally sign certificates/CRLs with RSASSA-PSS via the
  240. `--rsa-padding pss` option.
  241. - The sec-updater tool checks for security updates in dpkg-based repositories
  242. (e.g. Debian/Ubuntu) and sets the security flags in the IMV policy database
  243. accordingly. Additionally for each new package version a SWID tag for the
  244. given OS and HW architecture is created and stored in the database.
  245. Using the sec-updater.sh script template the lookup can be automated
  246. (e.g. via an hourly cron job).
  247. - The introduction of file versions in the IMV database scheme broke file
  248. reference hash measurements. This has been fixed by creating generic product
  249. versions having an empty package name.
  250. - A new timeout option for the systime-fix plugin stops periodic system time
  251. checks after a while and enforces a certificate verification, closing or
  252. reauthenticating all SAs with invalid certificates.
  253. - The IKE event counters, previously only available via ipsec listcounters, may
  254. now be queried/reset via vici and the new swanctl --counters command. They are
  255. provided by the new optional counters plugin.
  256. - Class attributes received in RADIUS Access-Accept messages may optionally be
  257. added to RADIUS accounting messages.
  258. - Inbound marks may optionally be installed on the SA again (was removed with
  259. 5.5.2) by enabling the mark_in_sa option in swanctl.conf.
  260. strongswan-5.6.0
  261. ----------------
  262. - Fixed a DoS vulnerability in the gmp plugin that was caused by insufficient
  263. input validation when verifying RSA signatures, which requires decryption
  264. with the operation m^e mod n, where m is the signature, and e and n are the
  265. exponent and modulus of the public key. The value m is an integer between
  266. 0 and n-1, however, the gmp plugin did not verify this. So if m equals n the
  267. calculation results in 0, in which case mpz_export() returns NULL. This
  268. result wasn't handled properly causing a null-pointer dereference.
  269. This vulnerability has been registered as CVE-2017-11185.
  270. - New SWIMA IMC/IMV pair implements the "draft-ietf-sacm-nea-swima-patnc"
  271. Internet Draft and has been demonstrated at the IETF 99 Prague Hackathon.
  272. - The IMV database template has been adapted to achieve full compliance
  273. with the ISO 19770-2:2015 SWID tag standard.
  274. - The sw-collector tool extracts software events from apt history logs
  275. and stores them in an SQLite database to be used by the SWIMA IMC.
  276. The tool can also generate SWID tags both for installed and removed
  277. package versions.
  278. - The pt-tls-client can attach and use TPM 2.0 protected private keys
  279. via the --keyid parameter.
  280. - libtpmtss supports Intel's TSS2 Architecture Broker and Resource
  281. Manager interface (tcti-tabrmd).
  282. - The new eap-aka-3gpp plugin implements the 3GPP MILENAGE algorithms
  283. in software. K (optionally concatenated with OPc) may be configured as
  284. binary EAP secret.
  285. - CHILD_SA rekeying was fixed in charon-tkm and was slightly changed: The
  286. switch to the new outbound IPsec SA now happens via SPI on the outbound
  287. policy on Linux, and in case of lost rekey collisions no outbound SA/policy
  288. is temporarily installed for the redundant CHILD_SA.
  289. - The new %unique-dir value for mark* settings allocates separate unique marks
  290. for each CHILD_SA direction (in/out).
  291. strongswan-5.5.3
  292. ----------------
  293. - Fixed a DoS vulnerability in the gmp plugin that was caused by insufficient
  294. input validation when verifying RSA signatures. More specifically,
  295. mpz_powm_sec() has two requirements regarding the passed exponent and modulus
  296. that the plugin did not enforce, if these are not met the calculation will
  297. result in a floating point exception that crashes the whole process.
  298. This vulnerability has been registered as CVE-2017-9022.
  299. - Fixed a DoS vulnerability in the x509 plugin that was caused because the ASN.1
  300. parser didn't handle ASN.1 CHOICE types properly, which could result in an
  301. infinite loop when parsing X.509 extensions that use such types.
  302. This vulnerability has been registered as CVE-2017-9023.
  303. - The behavior during IKEv2 CHILD_SA rekeying has been changed in order to avoid
  304. traffic loss. The responder now only installs the new inbound SA and delays
  305. installing the outbound SA until it receives the DELETE for the replaced
  306. CHILD_SA. Similarly, the inbound SA of the replaced CHILD_SA is not removed
  307. for a configurable amount of seconds (charon.delete_rekeyed_delay) after the
  308. DELETE has been processed to reduce the chance of dropping delayed packets.
  309. - The code base has been ported to Apple's ARM64 iOS platform, whose calling
  310. conventions for variadic and regular functions are different. This means
  311. assigning non-variadic functions to variadic function pointers does not work.
  312. To avoid this issue the enumerator_t interface has been changed and the
  313. signatures of the callback functions for enumerator_create_filter(), and the
  314. invoke_function() and find_first() methods on linked_list_t have been changed.
  315. The return type of find_first() also changed from status_t to bool.
  316. - Added support for fuzzing the certificate parser provided by the default
  317. plugins (x509, pem, gmp etc.) on Google's OSS-Fuzz infrastructure. Several
  318. issues found while fuzzing these plugins were fixed.
  319. - Two new options have been added to charon's retransmission settings:
  320. retransmit_limit and retransmit_jitter. The former adds an upper limit to the
  321. calculated retransmission timeout, the latter randomly reduces it.
  322. - A bug in swanctl's --load-creds command was fixed that caused unencrypted
  323. private keys to get unloaded if the command was called multiple times. The
  324. load-key VICI command now returns the key ID of the loaded key on success.
  325. - The credential manager now enumerates local credential sets before global
  326. ones. This means certificates supplied by the peer will now be preferred over
  327. certificates with the same identity that may be locally stored (e.g. in the
  328. certificate cache).
  329. - Added support for hardware offload of IPsec SAs as introduced by Linux 4.11
  330. for hardware that supports this.
  331. - When building the libraries monolithically and statically the plugin
  332. constructors are now hard-coded in each library so the plugin code is not
  333. removed by the linker because it thinks none of their symbols are ever
  334. referenced.
  335. - The pki tool loads the curve25519 plugin by default.
  336. strongswan-5.5.2
  337. ----------------
  338. - Support of Diffie-Hellman group 31 using Curve25519 for IKE as defined
  339. by RFC 8031.
  340. - Support of Ed25519 digital signature algorithm for IKEv2 as defined by
  341. draft-ietf-ipsecme-eddsa. Ed25519-based public key pairs, X.509 certificates
  342. and CRLs can be generated and printed by the pki tool.
  343. - The new "tpm" libtpmtss plugin allows to use persistent private RSA and ECDSA
  344. keys bound to a TPM 2.0 for both IKE and TLS authentication. Using the
  345. TPM 2.0 object handle as keyid parameter, the pki --pub tool can extract
  346. the public key from the TPM thereby replacing the aikpub2 tool. In a similar
  347. fashion pki --req can generate a PKCS#10 certificate request signed with
  348. the TPM private key.
  349. - The pki tool gained support for generating certificates with the RFC 3779
  350. addrblock extension. The charon addrblock plugin now dynamically narrows
  351. traffic selectors based on the certificate addrblocks instead of rejecting
  352. non-matching selectors completely. This allows generic connections, where
  353. the allowed selectors are defined by the used certificates only.
  354. - In-place update of cached base and delta CRLs does not leave dozens
  355. of stale copies in cache memory.
  356. - Several new features for the VICI interface and the swanctl utility: Querying
  357. specific pools, enumerating and unloading keys and shared secrets, loading
  358. keys and certificates from PKCS#11 tokens, the ability to initiate, install
  359. and uninstall connections and policies by their exact name (if multiple child
  360. sections in different connections share the same name), a command to initiate
  361. the rekeying of IKE and IPsec SAs, support for settings previously only
  362. supported by the old config files (plain pubkeys, dscp, certificate policies,
  363. IPv6 Transport Proxy Mode, NT Hash secrets, mediation extension).
  364. Important: Due to issues with VICI bindings that map sub-sections to
  365. dictionaries the CHILD_SA sections returned via list-sas now have a unique
  366. name, the original name of a CHILD_SA is returned in the "name" key of its
  367. section.
  368. strongswan-5.5.1
  369. ----------------
  370. - The newhope plugin implements the post-quantum NewHope key exchange algorithm
  371. proposed in their 2015 paper by Erdem Alkim, Léo Ducas, Thomas Pöppelmann and
  372. Peter Schwabe.
  373. - The libstrongswan crypto factory now offers the registration of Extended
  374. Output Functions (XOFs). Currently supported XOFs are SHAKE128 and SHAKE256
  375. implemented by the sha3 plugin, ChaCHa20 implemented by the chapoly plugin
  376. and the more traditional MGF1 Mask Generation Functions based on the SHA-1,
  377. SHA-256 and SHA-512 hash algorithms implemented by the new mgf1 plugin.
  378. - The pki tool, with help of the pkcs1 or openssl plugins, can parse private
  379. keys in any of the supported formats without having to know the exact type.
  380. So instead of having to specify rsa or ecdsa explicitly the keyword priv may
  381. be used to indicate a private key of any type. Similarly, swanctl can load
  382. any type of private key from the swanctl/private directory.
  383. - The pki tool can handle RSASSA-PKCS1v1.5-with-SHA-3 signatures using the
  384. sha3 and gmp plugins.
  385. - The VICI flush-certs command flushes certificates from the volatile
  386. certificate cache. Optionally the type of the certificates to be
  387. flushed (e.g. type = x509_crl) can be specified.
  388. - Setting cache_crls = yes in strongswan.conf the vici plugin saves regular,
  389. base and delta CRLs to disk.
  390. - IKE fragmentation is now enabled by default with the default fragment size
  391. set to 1280 bytes for both IP address families.
  392. - libtpmtss: In the TSS2 API the function TeardownSocketTcti() was replaced by
  393. tss2_tcti_finalize().
  394. strongswan-5.5.0
  395. ----------------
  396. - The new libtpmtss library offers support for both TPM 1.2 and TPM 2.0
  397. Trusted Platform Modules. This allows the Attestation IMC/IMV pair to
  398. do TPM 2.0 based attestation.
  399. - The behavior during IKEv2 exchange collisions has been improved/fixed in
  400. several corner cases and support for TEMPORARY_FAILURE and CHILD_SA_NOT_FOUND
  401. notifies, as defined by RFC 7296, has been added.
  402. - IPsec policy priorities can be set manually (e.g. for high-priority drop
  403. policies) and outbound policies may be restricted to a network interface.
  404. - The scheme for the automatically calculated default priorities has been
  405. changed and now also considers port masks, which were added with 5.4.0.
  406. - FWD policies are now installed in both directions in regards to the traffic
  407. selectors. Because such "outbound" FWD policies could conflict with "inbound"
  408. FWD policies of other SAs they are installed with a lower priority and don't
  409. have a reqid set, which allows kernel plugins to distinguish between the two
  410. and prefer those with a reqid.
  411. - For outbound IPsec SAs no replay window is configured anymore.
  412. - Enhanced the functionality of the swanctl --list-conns command by listing
  413. IKE_SA and CHILD_SA reauthentication and rekeying settings, and EAP/XAuth
  414. identities and EAP types.
  415. - DNS servers installed by the resolve plugin are now refcounted, which should
  416. fix its use with make-before-break reauthentication. Any output written to
  417. stderr/stdout by resolvconf is now logged.
  418. - The methods in the kernel interfaces have been changed to take structs instead
  419. of long lists of arguments. Similarly the constructors for peer_cfg_t and
  420. child_cfg_t now take structs.
  421. strongswan-5.4.0
  422. ----------------
  423. - Support for IKEv2 redirection (RFC 5685) has been added. Plugins may
  424. implement the redirect_provider_t interface to decide if and when to redirect
  425. connecting clients. It is also possible to redirect established IKE_SAs based
  426. on different selectors via VICI/swanctl. Unless disabled in strongswan.conf
  427. the charon daemon will follow redirect requests received from servers.
  428. - The ike: prefix enables the explicit configuration of signature scheme
  429. constraints against IKEv2 authentication in rightauth, which allows the use
  430. of different signature schemes for trustchain verification and authentication.
  431. - The initiator of an IKEv2 make-before-break reauthentication now suspends
  432. online certificate revocation checks (OCSP, CRLs) until the new IKE_SA and all
  433. CHILD_SAs are established. This is required if the checks are done over the
  434. CHILD_SA established with the new IKE_SA. This is not possible until the
  435. initiator installs this SA and that only happens after the authentication is
  436. completed successfully. So we suspend the checks during the reauthentication
  437. and do them afterwards, if they fail the IKE_SA is closed. This change has no
  438. effect on the behavior during the authentication of the initial IKE_SA.
  439. - For the vici plugin a Vici:Session Perl CPAN module has been added to allow
  440. Perl applications to control and/or monitor the IKE daemon using the VICI
  441. interface, similar to the existing Python egg or Ruby gem.
  442. - Traffic selectors with port ranges can now be configured in the Linux kernel:
  443. e.g. remote_ts = 10.1.0.0/16[tcp/20-23] local_ts = dynamic[tcp/32768-65535].
  444. The port range must map to a port mask, though since the kernel does not
  445. support arbitrary ranges.
  446. - The vici plugin allows the configuration of IPv4 and IPv6 address ranges
  447. in local and remote traffic selectors. Since both the Linux kernel and
  448. iptables cannot handle arbitrary ranges, address ranges are mapped to the next
  449. larger CIDR subnet by the kernel-netlink and updown plugins, respectively.
  450. - Implemented IKEv1 IPv4/IPv6 address subnet and range identities that can be
  451. used as owners of shared secrets.
  452. strongswan-5.3.5
  453. ----------------
  454. - Properly handle potential EINTR errors in sigwaitinfo(2) calls that replaced
  455. sigwait(3) calls with 5.3.4.
  456. - RADIUS retransmission timeouts are now configurable, courtesy of Thom Troy.
  457. strongswan-5.3.4
  458. ----------------
  459. - Fixed an authentication bypass vulnerability in the eap-mschapv2 plugin that
  460. was caused by insufficient verification of the internal state when handling
  461. MSCHAPv2 Success messages received by the client.
  462. This vulnerability has been registered as CVE-2015-8023.
  463. - The sha3 plugin implements the SHA3 Keccak-F1600 hash algorithm family.
  464. Within the strongSwan framework SHA3 is currently used for BLISS signatures
  465. only because the OIDs for other signature algorithms haven't been defined
  466. yet. Also the use of SHA3 for IKEv2 has not been standardized yet.
  467. strongswan-5.3.3
  468. ----------------
  469. - Added support for the ChaCha20/Poly1305 AEAD cipher specified in RFC 7539 and
  470. RFC 7634 using the chacha20poly1305 ike/esp proposal keyword. The new chapoly
  471. plugin implements the cipher, if possible SSE-accelerated on x86/x64
  472. architectures. It is usable both in IKEv2 and the strongSwan libipsec ESP
  473. backend. On Linux 4.2 or newer the kernel-netlink plugin can configure the
  474. cipher for ESP SAs.
  475. - The vici interface now supports the configuration of auxiliary certification
  476. authority information as CRL and OCSP URIs.
  477. - In the bliss plugin the c_indices derivation using a SHA-512 based random
  478. oracle has been fixed, generalized and standardized by employing the MGF1 mask
  479. generation function with SHA-512. As a consequence BLISS signatures unsing the
  480. improved oracle are not compatible with the earlier implementation.
  481. - Support for auto=route with right=%any for transport mode connections has
  482. been added (the ikev2/trap-any scenario provides examples).
  483. - The starter daemon does not flush IPsec policies and SAs anymore when it is
  484. stopped. Already existing duplicate policies are now overwritten by the IKE
  485. daemon when it installs its policies.
  486. - Init limits (like charon.init_limit_half_open) can now optionally be enforced
  487. when initiating SAs via VICI. For this, IKE_SAs initiated by the daemon are
  488. now also counted as half-open SAs, which, as a side-effect, fixes the status
  489. output while connecting (e.g. in ipsec status).
  490. - Symmetric configuration of EAP methods in left|rightauth is now possible when
  491. mutual EAP-only authentication is used (previously, the client had to
  492. configure rightauth=eap or rightauth=any, which prevented it from using this
  493. same config as responder).
  494. - The initiator flag in the IKEv2 header is compared again (wasn't the case
  495. since 5.0.0) and packets that have the flag set incorrectly are again ignored.
  496. - Implemented a demo Hardcopy Device IMC/IMV pair based on the "Hardcopy
  497. Device Health Assessment Trusted Network Connect Binding" (HCD-TNC)
  498. document drafted by the IEEE Printer Working Group (PWG).
  499. - Fixed IF-M segmentation which failed in the presence of multiple small
  500. attributes in front of a huge attribute to be segmented.
  501. strongswan-5.3.2
  502. ----------------
  503. - Fixed a vulnerability that allowed rogue servers with a valid certificate
  504. accepted by the client to trick it into disclosing its username and even
  505. password (if the client accepts EAP-GTC). This was caused because constraints
  506. against the responder's authentication were enforced too late.
  507. This vulnerability has been registered as CVE-2015-4171.
  508. strongswan-5.3.1
  509. ----------------
  510. - Fixed a denial-of-service and potential remote code execution vulnerability
  511. triggered by IKEv1/IKEv2 messages that contain payloads for the respective
  512. other IKE version. Such payload are treated specially since 5.2.2 but because
  513. they were still identified by their original payload type they were used as
  514. such in some places causing invalid function pointer dereferences.
  515. The vulnerability has been registered as CVE-2015-3991.
  516. - The new aesni plugin provides CBC, CTR, XCBC, CMAC, CCM and GCM crypto
  517. primitives for AES-128/192/256. The plugin requires AES-NI and PCLMULQDQ
  518. instructions and works on both x86 and x64 architectures. It provides
  519. superior crypto performance in userland without any external libraries.
  520. strongswan-5.3.0
  521. ----------------
  522. - Added support for IKEv2 make-before-break reauthentication. By using a global
  523. CHILD_SA reqid allocation mechanism, charon supports overlapping CHILD_SAs.
  524. This allows the use of make-before-break instead of the previously supported
  525. break-before-make reauthentication, avoiding connectivity gaps during that
  526. procedure. As the new mechanism may fail with peers not supporting it (such
  527. as any previous strongSwan release) it must be explicitly enabled using
  528. the charon.make_before_break strongswan.conf option.
  529. - Support for "Signature Authentication in IKEv2" (RFC 7427) has been added.
  530. This allows the use of stronger hash algorithms for public key authentication.
  531. By default, signature schemes are chosen based on the strength of the
  532. signature key, but specific hash algorithms may be configured in leftauth.
  533. - Key types and hash algorithms specified in rightauth are now also checked
  534. against IKEv2 signature schemes. If such constraints are used for certificate
  535. chain validation in existing configurations, in particular with peers that
  536. don't support RFC 7427, it may be necessary to disable this feature with the
  537. charon.signature_authentication_constraints setting, because the signature
  538. scheme used in classic IKEv2 public key authentication may not be strong
  539. enough.
  540. - The new connmark plugin allows a host to bind conntrack flows to a specific
  541. CHILD_SA by applying and restoring the SA mark to conntrack entries. This
  542. allows a peer to handle multiple transport mode connections coming over the
  543. same NAT device for client-initiated flows. A common use case is to protect
  544. L2TP/IPsec, as supported by some systems.
  545. - The forecast plugin can forward broadcast and multicast messages between
  546. connected clients and a LAN. For CHILD_SA using unique marks, it sets up
  547. the required Netfilter rules and uses a multicast/broadcast listener that
  548. forwards such messages to all connected clients. This plugin is designed for
  549. Windows 7 IKEv2 clients, which announces its services over the tunnel if the
  550. negotiated IPsec policy allows it.
  551. - For the vici plugin a Python Egg has been added to allow Python applications
  552. to control or monitor the IKE daemon using the VICI interface, similar to the
  553. existing ruby gem. The Python library has been contributed by Björn Schuberg.
  554. - EAP server methods now can fulfill public key constraints, such as rightcert
  555. or rightca. Additionally, public key and signature constraints can be
  556. specified for EAP methods in the rightauth keyword. Currently the EAP-TLS and
  557. EAP-TTLS methods provide verification details to constraints checking.
  558. - Upgrade of the BLISS post-quantum signature algorithm to the improved BLISS-B
  559. variant. Can be used in conjunction with the SHA256, SHA384 and SHA512 hash
  560. algorithms with SHA512 being the default.
  561. - The IF-IMV 1.4 interface now makes the IP address of the TNC access requestor
  562. as seen by the TNC server available to all IMVs. This information can be
  563. forwarded to policy enforcement points (e.g. firewalls or routers).
  564. - The new mutual tnccs-20 plugin parameter activates mutual TNC measurements
  565. in PB-TNC half-duplex mode between two endpoints over either a PT-EAP or
  566. PT-TLS transport medium.
  567. strongswan-5.2.2
  568. ----------------
  569. - Fixed a denial-of-service vulnerability triggered by an IKEv2 Key Exchange
  570. payload that contains the Diffie-Hellman group 1025. This identifier was
  571. used internally for DH groups with custom generator and prime. Because
  572. these arguments are missing when creating DH objects based on the KE payload
  573. an invalid pointer dereference occurred. This allowed an attacker to crash
  574. the IKE daemon with a single IKE_SA_INIT message containing such a KE
  575. payload. The vulnerability has been registered as CVE-2014-9221.
  576. - The left/rightid options in ipsec.conf, or any other identity in strongSwan,
  577. now accept prefixes to enforce an explicit type, such as email: or fqdn:.
  578. Note that no conversion is done for the remaining string, refer to
  579. ipsec.conf(5) for details.
  580. - The post-quantum Bimodal Lattice Signature Scheme (BLISS) can be used as
  581. an IKEv2 public key authentication method. The pki tool offers full support
  582. for the generation of BLISS key pairs and certificates.
  583. - Fixed mapping of integrity algorithms negotiated for AH via IKEv1. This could
  584. cause interoperability issues when connecting to older versions of charon.
  585. strongswan-5.2.1
  586. ----------------
  587. - The new charon-systemd IKE daemon implements an IKE daemon tailored for use
  588. with systemd. It avoids the dependency on ipsec starter and uses swanctl
  589. as configuration backend, building a simple and lightweight solution. It
  590. supports native systemd journal logging.
  591. - Support for IKEv2 fragmentation as per RFC 7383 has been added. Like IKEv1
  592. fragmentation it can be enabled by setting fragmentation=yes in ipsec.conf.
  593. - Support of the TCG TNC IF-M Attribute Segmentation specification proposal.
  594. All attributes can be segmented. Additionally TCG/SWID Tag, TCG/SWID Tag ID
  595. and IETF/Installed Packages attributes can be processed incrementally on a
  596. per segment basis.
  597. - The new ext-auth plugin calls an external script to implement custom IKE_SA
  598. authorization logic, courtesy of Vyronas Tsingaras.
  599. - For the vici plugin a ruby gem has been added to allow ruby applications
  600. to control or monitor the IKE daemon. The vici documentation has been updated
  601. to include a description of the available operations and some simple examples
  602. using both the libvici C interface and the ruby gem.
  603. strongswan-5.2.0
  604. ----------------
  605. - strongSwan has been ported to the Windows platform. Using a MinGW toolchain,
  606. many parts of the strongSwan codebase run natively on Windows 7 / 2008 R2
  607. and newer releases. charon-svc implements a Windows IKE service based on
  608. libcharon, the kernel-iph and kernel-wfp plugins act as networking and IPsec
  609. backend on the Windows platform. socket-win provides a native IKE socket
  610. implementation, while winhttp fetches CRL and OCSP information using the
  611. WinHTTP API.
  612. - The new vici plugin provides a Versatile IKE Configuration Interface for
  613. charon. Using the stable IPC interface, external applications can configure,
  614. control and monitor the IKE daemon. Instead of scripting the ipsec tool
  615. and generating ipsec.conf, third party applications can use the new interface
  616. for more control and better reliability.
  617. - Built upon the libvici client library, swanctl implements the first user of
  618. the VICI interface. Together with a swanctl.conf configuration file,
  619. connections can be defined, loaded and managed. swanctl provides a portable,
  620. complete IKE configuration and control interface for the command line.
  621. The first six swanctl example scenarios have been added.
  622. - The SWID IMV implements a JSON-based REST API which allows the exchange
  623. of SWID tags and Software IDs with the strongTNC policy manager.
  624. - The SWID IMC can extract all installed packages from the dpkg (Debian,
  625. Ubuntu, Linux Mint etc.), rpm (Fedora, RedHat, OpenSUSE, etc.), or
  626. pacman (Arch Linux, Manjaro, etc.) package managers, respectively, using the
  627. swidGenerator (https://github.com/strongswan/swidGenerator) which generates
  628. SWID tags according to the new ISO/IEC 19770-2:2014 standard.
  629. - All IMVs now share the access requestor ID, device ID and product info
  630. of an access requestor via a common imv_session object.
  631. - The Attestation IMC/IMV pair supports the IMA-NG measurement format
  632. introduced with the Linux 3.13 kernel.
  633. - The aikgen tool generates an Attestation Identity Key bound to a TPM.
  634. - Implemented the PT-EAP transport protocol (RFC 7171) for Trusted Network
  635. Connect.
  636. - The ipsec.conf replay_window option defines connection specific IPsec replay
  637. windows. Original patch courtesy of Zheng Zhong and Christophe Gouault from
  638. 6Wind.
  639. strongswan-5.1.3
  640. ----------------
  641. - Fixed an authentication bypass vulnerability triggered by rekeying an
  642. unestablished IKEv2 SA while it gets actively initiated. This allowed an
  643. attacker to trick a peer's IKE_SA state to established, without the need to
  644. provide any valid authentication credentials. The vulnerability has been
  645. registered as CVE-2014-2338.
  646. - The acert plugin evaluates X.509 Attribute Certificates. Group membership
  647. information encoded as strings can be used to fulfill authorization checks
  648. defined with the rightgroups option. Attribute Certificates can be loaded
  649. locally or get exchanged in IKEv2 certificate payloads.
  650. - The pki command gained support to generate X.509 Attribute Certificates
  651. using the --acert subcommand, while the --print command supports the ac type.
  652. The openac utility has been removed in favor of the new pki functionality.
  653. - The libtls TLS 1.2 implementation as used by EAP-(T)TLS and other protocols
  654. has been extended by AEAD mode support, currently limited to AES-GCM.
  655. strongswan-5.1.2
  656. ----------------
  657. - A new default configuration file layout is introduced. The new default
  658. strongswan.conf file mainly includes config snippets from the strongswan.d
  659. and strongswan.d/charon directories (the latter containing snippets for all
  660. plugins). The snippets, with commented defaults, are automatically
  661. generated and installed, if they don't exist yet. They are also installed
  662. in $prefix/share/strongswan/templates so existing files can be compared to
  663. the current defaults.
  664. - As an alternative to the non-extensible charon.load setting, the plugins
  665. to load in charon (and optionally other applications) can now be determined
  666. via the charon.plugins.<name>.load setting for each plugin (enabled in the
  667. new default strongswan.conf file via the charon.load_modular option).
  668. The load setting optionally takes a numeric priority value that allows
  669. reordering the plugins (otherwise the default plugin order is preserved).
  670. - All strongswan.conf settings that were formerly defined in library specific
  671. "global" sections are now application specific (e.g. settings for plugins in
  672. libstrongswan.plugins can now be set only for charon in charon.plugins).
  673. The old options are still supported, which now allows to define defaults for
  674. all applications in the libstrongswan section.
  675. - The ntru libstrongswan plugin supports NTRUEncrypt as a post-quantum
  676. computer IKE key exchange mechanism. The implementation is based on the
  677. ntru-crypto library from the NTRUOpenSourceProject. The supported security
  678. strengths are ntru112, ntru128, ntru192, and ntru256. Since the private DH
  679. group IDs 1030..1033 have been assigned, the strongSwan Vendor ID must be
  680. sent (charon.send_vendor_id = yes) in order to use NTRU.
  681. - Defined a TPMRA remote attestation workitem and added support for it to the
  682. Attestation IMV.
  683. - Compatibility issues between IPComp (compress=yes) and leftfirewall=yes as
  684. well as multiple subnets in left|rightsubnet have been fixed.
  685. - When enabling its "session" strongswan.conf option, the xauth-pam plugin opens
  686. and closes a PAM session for each established IKE_SA. Patch courtesy of
  687. Andrea Bonomi.
  688. - The strongSwan unit testing framework has been rewritten without the "check"
  689. dependency for improved flexibility and portability. It now properly supports
  690. multi-threaded and memory leak testing and brings a bunch of new test cases.
  691. strongswan-5.1.1
  692. ----------------
  693. - Fixed a denial-of-service vulnerability and potential authorization bypass
  694. triggered by a crafted ID_DER_ASN1_DN ID payload. The cause is an insufficient
  695. length check when comparing such identities. The vulnerability has been
  696. registered as CVE-2013-6075.
  697. - Fixed a denial-of-service vulnerability triggered by a crafted IKEv1
  698. fragmentation payload. The cause is a NULL pointer dereference. The
  699. vulnerability has been registered as CVE-2013-6076.
  700. - The lean stand-alone pt-tls-client can set up a RFC 6876 PT-TLS session
  701. with a strongSwan policy enforcement point which uses the tnc-pdp charon
  702. plugin.
  703. - The new TCG TNC SWID IMC/IMV pair supports targeted SWID requests for either
  704. full SWID Tag or concise SWID Tag ID inventories.
  705. - The XAuth backend in eap-radius now supports multiple XAuth exchanges for
  706. different credential types and display messages. All user input gets
  707. concatenated and verified with a single User-Password RADIUS attribute on
  708. the AAA. With an AAA supporting it, one for example can implement
  709. Password+Token authentication with proper dialogs on iOS and OS X clients.
  710. - charon supports IKEv1 Mode Config exchange in push mode. The ipsec.conf
  711. modeconfig=push option enables it for both client and server, the same way
  712. as pluto used it.
  713. - Using the "ah" ipsec.conf keyword on both IKEv1 and IKEv2 connections,
  714. charon can negotiate and install Security Associations integrity-protected by
  715. the Authentication Header protocol. Supported are plain AH(+IPComp) SAs only,
  716. but not the deprecated RFC2401 style ESP+AH bundles.
  717. - The generation of initialization vectors for IKE and ESP (when using libipsec)
  718. is now modularized and IVs for e.g. AES-GCM are now correctly allocated
  719. sequentially, while other algorithms like AES-CBC still use random IVs.
  720. - The left and right options in ipsec.conf can take multiple address ranges
  721. and subnets. This allows connection matching against a larger set of
  722. addresses, for example to use a different connection for clients connecting
  723. from a internal network.
  724. - For all those who have a queasy feeling about the NIST elliptic curve set,
  725. the Brainpool curves introduced for use with IKE by RFC 6932 might be a
  726. more trustworthy alternative.
  727. - The kernel-libipsec userland IPsec backend now supports usage statistics,
  728. volume based rekeying and accepts ESPv3 style TFC padded packets.
  729. - With two new strongswan.conf options fwmarks can be used to implement
  730. host-to-host tunnels with kernel-libipsec.
  731. - load-tester supports transport mode connections and more complex traffic
  732. selectors, including such using unique ports for each tunnel.
  733. - The new dnscert plugin provides support for authentication via CERT RRs that
  734. are protected via DNSSEC. The plugin was created by Ruslan N. Marchenko.
  735. - The eap-radius plugin supports forwarding of several Cisco Unity specific
  736. RADIUS attributes in corresponding configuration payloads.
  737. - Database transactions are now abstracted and implemented by the two backends.
  738. If you use MySQL make sure all tables use the InnoDB engine.
  739. - libstrongswan now can provide an experimental custom implementation of the
  740. printf family functions based on klibc if neither Vstr nor glibc style printf
  741. hooks are available. This can avoid the Vstr dependency on some systems at
  742. the cost of slower and less complete printf functions.
  743. strongswan-5.1.0
  744. ----------------
  745. - Fixed a denial-of-service vulnerability triggered by specific XAuth usernames
  746. and EAP identities (since 5.0.3), and PEM files (since 4.1.11). The crash
  747. was caused by insufficient error handling in the is_asn1() function.
  748. The vulnerability has been registered as CVE-2013-5018.
  749. - The new charon-cmd command line IKE client can establish road warrior
  750. connections using IKEv1 or IKEv2 with different authentication profiles.
  751. It does not depend on any configuration files and can be configured using a
  752. few simple command line options.
  753. - The kernel-pfroute networking backend has been greatly improved. It now
  754. can install virtual IPs on TUN devices on OS X and FreeBSD, allowing these
  755. systems to act as a client in common road warrior scenarios.
  756. - The new kernel-libipsec plugin uses TUN devices and libipsec to provide IPsec
  757. processing in userland on Linux, FreeBSD and Mac OS X.
  758. - The eap-radius plugin can now serve as an XAuth backend called xauth-radius,
  759. directly verifying XAuth credentials using RADIUS User-Name/User-Password
  760. attributes. This is more efficient than the existing xauth-eap+eap-radius
  761. combination, and allows RADIUS servers without EAP support to act as AAA
  762. backend for IKEv1.
  763. - The new osx-attr plugin installs configuration attributes (currently DNS
  764. servers) via SystemConfiguration on Mac OS X. The keychain plugin provides
  765. certificates from the OS X keychain service.
  766. - The sshkey plugin parses SSH public keys, which, together with the --agent
  767. option for charon-cmd, allows the use of ssh-agent for authentication.
  768. To configure SSH keys in ipsec.conf the left|rightrsasigkey options are
  769. replaced with left|rightsigkey, which now take public keys in one of three
  770. formats: SSH (RFC 4253, ssh: prefix), DNSKEY (RFC 3110, dns: prefix), and
  771. PKCS#1 (the default, no prefix).
  772. - Extraction of certificates and private keys from PKCS#12 files is now provided
  773. by the new pkcs12 plugin or the openssl plugin. charon-cmd (--p12) as well
  774. as charon (via P12 token in ipsec.secrets) can make use of this.
  775. - IKEv2 can now negotiate transport mode and IPComp in NAT situations.
  776. - IKEv2 exchange initiators now properly close an established IKE or CHILD_SA
  777. on error conditions using an additional exchange, keeping state in sync
  778. between peers.
  779. - Using a SQL database interface a Trusted Network Connect (TNC) Policy Manager
  780. can generate specific measurement workitems for an arbitrary number of
  781. Integrity Measurement Verifiers (IMVs) based on the history of the VPN user
  782. and/or device.
  783. - Several core classes in libstrongswan are now tested with unit tests. These
  784. can be enabled with --enable-unit-tests and run with 'make check'. Coverage
  785. reports can be generated with --enable-coverage and 'make coverage' (this
  786. disables any optimization, so it should not be enabled when building
  787. production releases).
  788. - The leak-detective developer tool has been greatly improved. It works much
  789. faster/stabler with multiple threads, does not use deprecated malloc hooks
  790. anymore and has been ported to OS X.
  791. - chunk_hash() is now based on SipHash-2-4 with a random key. This provides
  792. better distribution and prevents hash flooding attacks when used with
  793. hashtables.
  794. - All default plugins implement the get_features() method to define features
  795. and their dependencies. The plugin loader has been improved, so that plugins
  796. in a custom load statement can be ordered freely or to express preferences
  797. without being affected by dependencies between plugin features.
  798. - A centralized thread can take care for watching multiple file descriptors
  799. concurrently. This removes the need for a dedicated listener threads in
  800. various plugins. The number of "reserved" threads for such tasks has been
  801. reduced to about five, depending on the plugin configuration.
  802. - Plugins that can be controlled by a UNIX socket IPC mechanism gained network
  803. transparency. Third party applications querying these plugins now can use
  804. TCP connections from a different host.
  805. - libipsec now supports AES-GCM.
  806. strongswan-5.0.4
  807. ----------------
  808. - Fixed a security vulnerability in the openssl plugin which was reported by
  809. Kevin Wojtysiak. The vulnerability has been registered as CVE-2013-2944.
  810. Before the fix, if the openssl plugin's ECDSA signature verification was used,
  811. due to a misinterpretation of the error code returned by the OpenSSL
  812. ECDSA_verify() function, an empty or zeroed signature was accepted as a
  813. legitimate one.
  814. - The handling of a couple of other non-security relevant openssl return codes
  815. was fixed as well.
  816. - The tnc_ifmap plugin now publishes virtual IPv4 and IPv6 addresses via its
  817. TCG TNC IF-MAP 2.1 interface.
  818. - The charon.initiator_only option causes charon to ignore IKE initiation
  819. requests.
  820. - The openssl plugin can now use the openssl-fips library.
  821. strongswan-5.0.3
  822. ----------------
  823. - The new ipseckey plugin enables authentication based on trustworthy public
  824. keys stored as IPSECKEY resource records in the DNS and protected by DNSSEC.
  825. To do so it uses a DNSSEC enabled resolver, like the one provided by the new
  826. unbound plugin, which is based on libldns and libunbound. Both plugins were
  827. created by Reto Guadagnini.
  828. - Implemented the TCG TNC IF-IMV 1.4 draft making access requestor identities
  829. available to an IMV. The OS IMV stores the AR identity together with the
  830. device ID in the attest database.
  831. - The openssl plugin now uses the AES-NI accelerated version of AES-GCM
  832. if the hardware supports it.
  833. - The eap-radius plugin can now assign virtual IPs to IKE clients using the
  834. Framed-IP-Address attribute by using the "%radius" named pool in the
  835. rightsourceip ipsec.conf option. Cisco Banner attributes are forwarded to
  836. Unity-capable IKEv1 clients during mode config. charon now sends Interim
  837. Accounting updates if requested by the RADIUS server, reports
  838. sent/received packets in Accounting messages, and adds a Terminate-Cause
  839. to Accounting-Stops.
  840. - The recently introduced "ipsec listcounters" command can report connection
  841. specific counters by passing a connection name, and global or connection
  842. counters can be reset by the "ipsec resetcounters" command.
  843. - The strongSwan libpttls library provides an experimental implementation of
  844. PT-TLS (RFC 6876), a Posture Transport Protocol over TLS.
  845. - The charon systime-fix plugin can disable certificate lifetime checks on
  846. embedded systems if the system time is obviously out of sync after bootup.
  847. Certificates lifetimes get checked once the system time gets sane, closing
  848. or reauthenticating connections using expired certificates.
  849. - The "ikedscp" ipsec.conf option can set DiffServ code points on outgoing
  850. IKE packets.
  851. - The new xauth-noauth plugin allows to use basic RSA or PSK authentication with
  852. clients that cannot be configured without XAuth authentication. The plugin
  853. simply concludes the XAuth exchange successfully without actually performing
  854. any authentication. Therefore, to use this backend it has to be selected
  855. explicitly with rightauth2=xauth-noauth.
  856. - The new charon-tkm IKEv2 daemon delegates security critical operations to a
  857. separate process. This has the benefit that the network facing daemon has no
  858. knowledge of keying material used to protect child SAs. Thus subverting
  859. charon-tkm does not result in the compromise of cryptographic keys.
  860. The extracted functionality has been implemented from scratch in a minimal TCB
  861. (trusted computing base) in the Ada programming language. Further information
  862. can be found at https://www.codelabs.ch/tkm/.
  863. strongswan-5.0.2
  864. ----------------
  865. - Implemented all IETF Standard PA-TNC attributes and an OS IMC/IMV
  866. pair using them to transfer operating system information.
  867. - The new "ipsec listcounters" command prints a list of global counter values
  868. about received and sent IKE messages and rekeyings.
  869. - A new lookip plugin can perform fast lookup of tunnel information using a
  870. clients virtual IP and can send notifications about established or deleted
  871. tunnels. The "ipsec lookip" command can be used to query such information
  872. or receive notifications.
  873. - The new error-notify plugin catches some common error conditions and allows
  874. an external application to receive notifications for them over a UNIX socket.
  875. - IKE proposals can now use a PRF algorithm different to that defined for
  876. integrity protection. If an algorithm with a "prf" prefix is defined
  877. explicitly (such as prfsha1 or prfsha256), no implicit PRF algorithm based on
  878. the integrity algorithm is added to the proposal.
  879. - The pkcs11 plugin can now load leftcert certificates from a smartcard for a
  880. specific ipsec.conf conn section and cacert CA certificates for a specific ca
  881. section.
  882. - The load-tester plugin gained additional options for certificate generation
  883. and can load keys and multiple CA certificates from external files. It can
  884. install a dedicated outer IP address for each tunnel and tunnel initiation
  885. batches can be triggered and monitored externally using the
  886. "ipsec load-tester" tool.
  887. - PKCS#7 container parsing has been modularized, and the openssl plugin
  888. gained an alternative implementation to decrypt and verify such files.
  889. In contrast to our own DER parser, OpenSSL can handle BER files, which is
  890. required for interoperability of our scepclient with EJBCA.
  891. - Support for the proprietary IKEv1 fragmentation extension has been added.
  892. Fragments are always handled on receipt but only sent if supported by the peer
  893. and if enabled with the new fragmentation ipsec.conf option.
  894. - IKEv1 in charon can now parse certificates received in PKCS#7 containers and
  895. supports NAT traversal as used by Windows clients. Patches courtesy of
  896. Volker Rümelin.
  897. - The new rdrand plugin provides a high quality / high performance random
  898. source using the Intel rdrand instruction found on Ivy Bridge processors.
  899. - The integration test environment was updated and now uses KVM and reproducible
  900. guest images based on Debian.
  901. strongswan-5.0.1
  902. ----------------
  903. - Introduced the sending of the standard IETF Assessment Result
  904. PA-TNC attribute by all strongSwan Integrity Measurement Verifiers.
  905. - Extended PTS Attestation IMC/IMV pair to provide full evidence of
  906. the Linux IMA measurement process. All pertinent file information
  907. of a Linux OS can be collected and stored in an SQL database.
  908. - The PA-TNC and PB-TNC protocols can now process huge data payloads
  909. >64 kB by distributing PA-TNC attributes over multiple PA-TNC messages
  910. and these messages over several PB-TNC batches. As long as no
  911. consolidated recommandation from all IMVs can be obtained, the TNC
  912. server requests more client data by sending an empty SDATA batch.
  913. - The rightgroups2 ipsec.conf option can require group membership during
  914. a second authentication round, for example during XAuth authentication
  915. against a RADIUS server.
  916. - The xauth-pam backend can authenticate IKEv1 XAuth and Hybrid authenticated
  917. clients against any PAM service. The IKEv2 eap-gtc plugin does not use
  918. PAM directly anymore, but can use any XAuth backend to verify credentials,
  919. including xauth-pam.
  920. - The new unity plugin brings support for some parts of the IKEv1 Cisco Unity
  921. Extension. As client, charon narrows traffic selectors to the received
  922. Split-Include attributes and automatically installs IPsec bypass policies
  923. for received Local-LAN attributes. As server, charon sends Split-Include
  924. attributes for leftsubnet definitions containing multiple subnets to Unity-
  925. aware clients.
  926. - An EAP-Nak payload is returned by clients if the gateway requests an EAP
  927. method that the client does not support. Clients can also request a specific
  928. EAP method by configuring that method with leftauth.
  929. - The eap-dynamic plugin handles EAP-Nak payloads returned by clients and uses
  930. these to select a different EAP method supported/requested by the client.
  931. The plugin initially requests the first registered method or the first method
  932. configured with charon.plugins.eap-dynamic.preferred.
  933. - The new left/rightdns options specify connection specific DNS servers to
  934. request/respond in IKEv2 configuration payloads or IKEv2 mode config. leftdns
  935. can be any (comma separated) combination of %config4 and %config6 to request
  936. multiple servers, both for IPv4 and IPv6. rightdns takes a list of DNS server
  937. IP addresses to return.
  938. - The left/rightsourceip options now accept multiple addresses or pools.
  939. leftsourceip can be any (comma separated) combination of %config4, %config6
  940. or fixed IP addresses to request. rightsourceip accepts multiple explicitly
  941. specified or referenced named pools.
  942. - Multiple connections can now share a single address pool when they use the
  943. same definition in one of the rightsourceip pools.
  944. - The options charon.interfaces_ignore and charon.interfaces_use allow one to
  945. configure the network interfaces used by the daemon.
  946. - The kernel-netlink plugin supports the charon.install_virtual_ip_on option,
  947. which specifies the interface on which virtual IP addresses will be installed.
  948. If it is not specified the current behavior of using the outbound interface
  949. is preserved.
  950. - The kernel-netlink plugin tries to keep the current source address when
  951. looking for valid routes to reach other hosts.
  952. - The autotools build has been migrated to use a config.h header. strongSwan
  953. development headers will get installed during "make install" if
  954. --with-dev-headers has been passed to ./configure.
  955. - All crypto primitives gained return values for most operations, allowing
  956. crypto backends to fail, for example when using hardware accelerators.
  957. strongswan-5.0.0
  958. ----------------
  959. - The charon IKE daemon gained experimental support for the IKEv1 protocol.
  960. Pluto has been removed from the 5.x series, and unless strongSwan is
  961. configured with --disable-ikev1 or --disable-ikev2, charon handles both
  962. keying protocols. The feature-set of IKEv1 in charon is almost on par with
  963. pluto, but currently does not support AH or bundled AH+ESP SAs. Beside
  964. RSA/ECDSA, PSK and XAuth, charon also supports the Hybrid authentication
  965. mode. Information for interoperability and migration is available at
  966. https://wiki.strongswan.org/projects/strongswan/wiki/CharonPlutoIKEv1.
  967. - Charon's bus_t has been refactored so that loggers and other listeners are
  968. now handled separately. The single lock was previously cause for deadlocks
  969. if extensive listeners, such as the one provided by the updown plugin, wanted
  970. to acquire locks that were held by other threads which in turn tried to log
  971. messages, and thus were waiting to acquire the same lock currently held by
  972. the thread calling the listener.
  973. The implemented changes also allow the use of a read/write-lock for the
  974. loggers which increases performance if multiple loggers are registered.
  975. Besides several interface changes this last bit also changes the semantics
  976. for loggers as these may now be called by multiple threads at the same time.
  977. - Source routes are reinstalled if interfaces are reactivated or IP addresses
  978. reappear.
  979. - The thread pool (processor_t) now has more control over the lifecycle of
  980. a job (see job.h for details). In particular, it now controls the destruction
  981. of jobs after execution and the cancellation of jobs during shutdown. Due to
  982. these changes the requeueing feature, previously available to callback_job_t
  983. only, is now available to all jobs (in addition to a new rescheduling
  984. feature).
  985. - In addition to trustchain key strength definitions for different public key
  986. systems, the rightauth option now takes a list of signature hash algorithms
  987. considered save for trustchain validation. For example, the setting
  988. rightauth=rsa-2048-ecdsa-256-sha256-sha384-sha512 requires a trustchain
  989. that uses at least RSA-2048 or ECDSA-256 keys and certificate signatures
  990. using SHA-256 or better.
  991. strongswan-4.6.4
  992. ----------------
  993. - Fixed a security vulnerability in the gmp plugin. If this plugin was used
  994. for RSA signature verification an empty or zeroed signature was handled as
  995. a legitimate one.
  996. - Fixed several issues with reauthentication and address updates.
  997. strongswan-4.6.3
  998. ----------------
  999. - The tnc-pdp plugin implements a RADIUS server interface allowing
  1000. a strongSwan TNC server to act as a Policy Decision Point.
  1001. - The eap-radius authentication backend enforces Session-Timeout attributes
  1002. using RFC4478 repeated authentication and acts upon RADIUS Dynamic
  1003. Authorization extensions, RFC 5176. Currently supported are disconnect
  1004. requests and CoA messages containing a Session-Timeout.
  1005. - The eap-radius plugin can forward arbitrary RADIUS attributes from and to
  1006. clients using custom IKEv2 notify payloads. The new radattr plugin reads
  1007. attributes to include from files and prints received attributes to the
  1008. console.
  1009. - Added support for untruncated MD5 and SHA1 HMACs in ESP as used in
  1010. RFC 4595.
  1011. - The cmac plugin implements the AES-CMAC-96 and AES-CMAC-PRF-128 algorithms
  1012. as defined in RFC 4494 and RFC 4615, respectively.
  1013. - The resolve plugin automatically installs nameservers via resolvconf(8),
  1014. if it is installed, instead of modifying /etc/resolv.conf directly.
  1015. - The IKEv2 charon daemon supports now raw RSA public keys in RFC 3110
  1016. DNSKEY and PKCS#1 file format.
  1017. strongswan-4.6.2
  1018. ----------------
  1019. - Upgraded the TCG IF-IMC and IF-IMV C API to the upcoming version 1.3
  1020. which supports IF-TNCCS 2.0 long message types, the exclusive flags
  1021. and multiple IMC/IMV IDs. Both the TNC Client and Server as well as
  1022. the "Test", "Scanner", and "Attestation" IMC/IMV pairs were updated.
  1023. - Fully implemented the "TCG Attestation PTS Protocol: Binding to IF-M"
  1024. standard (TLV-based messages only). TPM-based remote attestation of
  1025. Linux IMA (Integrity Measurement Architecture) possible. Measurement
  1026. reference values are automatically stored in an SQLite database.
  1027. - The EAP-RADIUS authentication backend supports RADIUS accounting. It sends
  1028. start/stop messages containing Username, Framed-IP and Input/Output-Octets
  1029. attributes and has been tested against FreeRADIUS and Microsoft NPS.
  1030. - Added support for PKCS#8 encoded private keys via the libstrongswan
  1031. pkcs8 plugin. This is the default format used by some OpenSSL tools since
  1032. version 1.0.0 (e.g. openssl req with -keyout).
  1033. - Added session resumption support to the strongSwan TLS stack.
  1034. strongswan-4.6.1
  1035. ----------------
  1036. - Because of changing checksums before and after installation which caused
  1037. the integrity tests to fail we avoided directly linking libsimaka, libtls and
  1038. libtnccs to those libcharon plugins which make use of these dynamic libraries.
  1039. Instead we linked the libraries to the charon daemon. Unfortunately Ubuntu
  1040. 11.10 activated the --as-needed ld option which discards explicit links
  1041. to dynamic libraries that are not actually used by the charon daemon itself,
  1042. thus causing failures during the loading of the plugins which depend on these
  1043. libraries for resolving external symbols.
  1044. - Therefore our approach of computing integrity checksums for plugins had to be
  1045. changed radically by moving the hash generation from the compilation to the
  1046. post-installation phase.
  1047. strongswan-4.6.0
  1048. ----------------
  1049. - The new libstrongswan certexpire plugin collects expiration information of
  1050. all used certificates and exports them to CSV files. It either directly
  1051. exports them or uses cron style scheduling for batch exports.
  1052. - starter passes unresolved hostnames to charon, allowing it to do name
  1053. resolution not before the connection attempt. This is especially useful with
  1054. connections between hosts using dynamic IP addresses. Thanks to Mirko Parthey
  1055. for the initial patch.
  1056. - The android plugin can now be used without the Android frontend patch and
  1057. provides DNS server registration and logging to logcat.
  1058. - Pluto and starter (plus stroke and whack) have been ported to Android.
  1059. - Support for ECDSA private and public key operations has been added to the
  1060. pkcs11 plugin. The plugin now also provides DH and ECDH via PKCS#11 and can
  1061. use tokens as random number generators (RNG). By default only private key
  1062. operations are enabled, more advanced features have to be enabled by their
  1063. option in strongswan.conf. This also applies to public key operations (even
  1064. for keys not stored on the token) which were enabled by default before.
  1065. - The libstrongswan plugin system now supports detailed plugin dependencies.
  1066. Many plugins have been extended to export its capabilities and requirements.
  1067. This allows the plugin loader to resolve plugin loading order automatically,
  1068. and in future releases, to dynamically load the required features on demand.
  1069. Existing third party plugins are source (but not binary) compatible if they
  1070. properly initialize the new get_features() plugin function to NULL.
  1071. - The tnc-ifmap plugin implements a TNC IF-MAP 2.0 client which can deliver
  1072. metadata about IKE_SAs via a SOAP interface to a MAP server. The tnc-ifmap
  1073. plugin requires the Apache Axis2/C library.
  1074. strongswan-4.5.3
  1075. ----------------
  1076. - Our private libraries (e.g. libstrongswan) are not installed directly in
  1077. prefix/lib anymore. Instead a subdirectory is used (prefix/lib/ipsec/ by
  1078. default). The plugins directory is also moved from libexec/ipsec/ to that
  1079. directory.
  1080. - The dynamic IMC/IMV libraries were moved from the plugins directory to
  1081. a new imcvs directory in the prefix/lib/ipsec/ subdirectory.
  1082. - Job priorities were introduced to prevent thread starvation caused by too
  1083. many threads handling blocking operations (such as CRL fetching). Refer to
  1084. strongswan.conf(5) for details.
  1085. - Two new strongswan.conf options allow to fine-tune performance on IKEv2
  1086. gateways by dropping IKE_SA_INIT requests on high load.
  1087. - IKEv2 charon daemon supports start PASS and DROP shunt policies
  1088. preventing traffic to go through IPsec connections. Installation of the
  1089. shunt policies either via the XFRM netfilter or PFKEYv2 IPsec kernel
  1090. interfaces.
  1091. - The history of policies installed in the kernel is now tracked so that e.g.
  1092. trap policies are correctly updated when reauthenticated SAs are terminated.
  1093. - IMC/IMV Scanner pair implementing the RFC 5792 PA-TNC (IF-M) protocol.
  1094. Using "netstat -l" the IMC scans open listening ports on the TNC client
  1095. and sends a port list to the IMV which based on a port policy decides if
  1096. the client is admitted to the network.
  1097. (--enable-imc-scanner/--enable-imv-scanner).
  1098. - IMC/IMV Test pair implementing the RFC 5792 PA-TNC (IF-M) protocol.
  1099. (--enable-imc-test/--enable-imv-test).
  1100. - The IKEv2 close action does not use the same value as the ipsec.conf dpdaction
  1101. setting, but the value defined by its own closeaction keyword. The action
  1102. is triggered if the remote peer closes a CHILD_SA unexpectedly.
  1103. strongswan-4.5.2
  1104. ----------------
  1105. - The whitelist plugin for the IKEv2 daemon maintains an in-memory identity
  1106. whitelist. Any connection attempt of peers not whitelisted will get rejected.
  1107. The 'ipsec whitelist' utility provides a simple command line frontend for
  1108. whitelist administration.
  1109. - The duplicheck plugin provides a specialized form of duplicate checking,
  1110. doing a liveness check on the old SA and optionally notify a third party
  1111. application about detected duplicates.
  1112. - The coupling plugin permanently couples two or more devices by limiting
  1113. authentication to previously used certificates.
  1114. - In the case that the peer config and child config don't have the same name
  1115. (usually in SQL database defined connections), ipsec up|route <peer config>
  1116. starts|routes all associated child configs and ipsec up|route <child config>
  1117. only starts|routes the specific child config.
  1118. - fixed the encoding and parsing of X.509 certificate policy statements (CPS).
  1119. - Duncan Salerno contributed the eap-sim-pcsc plugin implementing a
  1120. pcsc-lite based SIM card backend.
  1121. - The eap-peap plugin implements the EAP PEAP protocol. Interoperates
  1122. successfully with a FreeRADIUS server and Windows 7 Agile VPN clients.
  1123. - The IKEv2 daemon charon rereads strongswan.conf on SIGHUP and instructs
  1124. all plugins to reload. Currently only the eap-radius and the attr plugins
  1125. support configuration reloading.
  1126. - Added userland support to the IKEv2 daemon for Extended Sequence Numbers
  1127. support coming with Linux 2.6.39. To enable ESN on a connection, add
  1128. the 'esn' keyword to the proposal. The default proposal uses 32-bit sequence
  1129. numbers only ('noesn'), and the same value is used if no ESN mode is
  1130. specified. To negotiate ESN support with the peer, include both, e.g.
  1131. esp=aes128-sha1-esn-noesn.
  1132. - In addition to ESN, Linux 2.6.39 gained support for replay windows larger
  1133. than 32 packets. The new global strongswan.conf option 'charon.replay_window'
  1134. configures the size of the replay window, in packets.
  1135. strongswan-4.5.1
  1136. ----------------
  1137. - Sansar Choinyambuu implemented the RFC 5793 Posture Broker Protocol (BP)
  1138. compatible with Trusted Network Connect (TNC). The TNCCS 2.0 protocol
  1139. requires the tnccs_20, tnc_imc and tnc_imv plugins but does not depend
  1140. on the libtnc library. Any available IMV/IMC pairs conforming to the
  1141. Trusted Computing Group's TNC-IF-IMV/IMC 1.2 interface specification
  1142. can be loaded via /etc/tnc_config.
  1143. - Re-implemented the TNCCS 1.1 protocol by using the tnc_imc and tnc_imv
  1144. in place of the external libtnc library.
  1145. - The tnccs_dynamic plugin loaded on a TNC server in addition to the
  1146. tnccs_11 and tnccs_20 plugins, dynamically detects the IF-TNCCS
  1147. protocol version used by a TNC client and invokes an instance of
  1148. the corresponding protocol stack.
  1149. - IKE and ESP proposals can now be stored in an SQL database using a
  1150. new proposals table. The start_action field in the child_configs
  1151. tables allows the automatic starting or routing of connections stored
  1152. in an SQL database.
  1153. - The new certificate_authorities and certificate_distribution_points
  1154. tables make it possible to store CRL and OCSP Certificate Distribution
  1155. points in an SQL database.
  1156. - The new 'include' statement allows to recursively include other files in
  1157. strongswan.conf. Existing sections and values are thereby extended and
  1158. replaced, respectively.
  1159. - Due to the changes in the parser for strongswan.conf, the configuration
  1160. syntax for the attr plugin has changed. Previously, it was possible to
  1161. specify multiple values of a specific attribute type by adding multiple
  1162. key/value pairs with the same key (e.g. dns) to the plugins.attr section.
  1163. Because values with the same key now replace previously defined values
  1164. this is not possible anymore. As an alternative, multiple values can be
  1165. specified by separating them with a comma (e.g. dns = 1.2.3.4, 2.3.4.5).
  1166. - ipsec listalgs now appends (set in square brackets) to each crypto
  1167. algorithm listed the plugin that registered the function.
  1168. - Traffic Flow Confidentiality padding supported with Linux 2.6.38 can be used
  1169. by the IKEv2 daemon. The ipsec.conf 'tfc' keyword pads all packets to a given
  1170. boundary, the special value '%mtu' pads all packets to the path MTU.
  1171. - The new af-alg plugin can use various crypto primitives of the Linux Crypto
  1172. API using the AF_ALG interface introduced with 2.6.38. This removes the need
  1173. for additional userland implementations of symmetric cipher, hash, hmac and
  1174. xcbc algorithms.
  1175. - The IKEv2 daemon supports the INITIAL_CONTACT notify as initiator and
  1176. responder. The notify is sent when initiating configurations with a unique
  1177. policy, set in ipsec.conf via the global 'uniqueids' option.
  1178. - The conftest conformance testing framework enables the IKEv2 stack to perform
  1179. many tests using a distinct tool and configuration frontend. Various hooks
  1180. can alter reserved bits, flags, add custom notifies and proposals, reorder
  1181. or drop messages and much more. It is enabled using the --enable-conftest
  1182. ./configure switch.
  1183. - The new libstrongswan constraints plugin provides advanced X.509 constraint
  1184. checking. In addition to X.509 pathLen constraints, the plugin checks for
  1185. nameConstraints and certificatePolicies, including policyMappings and
  1186. policyConstraints. The x509 certificate plugin and the pki tool have been
  1187. enhanced to support these extensions. The new left/rightcertpolicy ipsec.conf
  1188. connection keywords take OIDs a peer certificate must have.
  1189. - The left/rightauth ipsec.conf keywords accept values with a minimum strength
  1190. for trustchain public keys in bits, such as rsa-2048 or ecdsa-256.
  1191. - The revocation and x509 libstrongswan plugins and the pki tool gained basic
  1192. support for delta CRLs.
  1193. strongswan-4.5.0
  1194. ----------------
  1195. - IMPORTANT: the default keyexchange mode 'ike' is changing with release 4.5
  1196. from 'ikev1' to 'ikev2', thus commemorating the five year anniversary of the
  1197. IKEv2 RFC 4306 and its mature successor RFC 5996. The time has definitively
  1198. come for IKEv1 to go into retirement and to cede its place to the much more
  1199. robust, powerful and versatile IKEv2 protocol!
  1200. - Added new ctr, ccm and gcm plugins providing Counter, Counter with CBC-MAC
  1201. and Galois/Counter Modes based on existing CBC implementations. These
  1202. new plugins bring support for AES and Camellia Counter and CCM algorithms
  1203. and the AES GCM algorithms for use in IKEv2.
  1204. - The new pkcs11 plugin brings full Smartcard support to the IKEv2 daemon and
  1205. the pki utility using one or more PKCS#11 libraries. It currently supports
  1206. RSA private and public key operations and loads X.509 certificates from
  1207. tokens.
  1208. - Implemented a general purpose TLS stack based on crypto and credential
  1209. primitives of libstrongswan. libtls supports TLS versions 1.0, 1.1 and 1.2,
  1210. ECDHE-ECDSA/RSA, DHE-RSA and RSA key exchange algorithms and RSA/ECDSA based
  1211. client authentication.
  1212. - Based on libtls, the eap-tls plugin brings certificate based EAP
  1213. authentication for client and server. It is compatible to Windows 7 IKEv2
  1214. Smartcard authentication and the OpenSSL based FreeRADIUS EAP-TLS backend.
  1215. - Implemented the TNCCS 1.1 Trusted Network Connect protocol using the
  1216. libtnc library on the strongSwan client and server side via the tnccs_11
  1217. plugin and optionally connecting to a TNC@FHH-enhanced FreeRADIUS AAA server.
  1218. Depending on the resulting TNC Recommendation, strongSwan clients are granted
  1219. access to a network behind a strongSwan gateway (allow), are put into a
  1220. remediation zone (isolate) or are blocked (none), respectively. Any number
  1221. of Integrity Measurement Collector/Verifier pairs can be attached
  1222. via the tnc-imc and tnc-imv charon plugins.
  1223. - The IKEv1 daemon pluto now uses the same kernel interfaces as the IKEv2
  1224. daemon charon. As a result of this, pluto now supports xfrm marks which
  1225. were introduced in charon with 4.4.1.
  1226. - Applets for Maemo 5 (Nokia) allow to easily configure and control IKEv2
  1227. based VPN connections with EAP authentication on supported devices.
  1228. - The RADIUS plugin eap-radius now supports multiple RADIUS servers for
  1229. redundant setups. Servers are selected by a defined priority, server load and
  1230. availability.
  1231. - The simple led plugin controls hardware LEDs through the Linux LED subsystem.
  1232. It currently shows activity of the IKE daemon and is a good example how to
  1233. implement a simple event listener.
  1234. - Improved MOBIKE behavior in several corner cases, for instance, if the
  1235. initial responder moves to a different address.
  1236. - Fixed left-/rightnexthop option, which was broken since 4.4.0.
  1237. - Fixed a bug not releasing a virtual IP address to a pool if the XAUTH
  1238. identity was different from the IKE identity.
  1239. - Fixed the alignment of ModeConfig messages on 4-byte boundaries in the
  1240. case where the attributes are not a multiple of 4 bytes (e.g. Cisco's
  1241. UNITY_BANNER).
  1242. - Fixed the interoperability of the socket_raw and socket_default
  1243. charon plugins.
  1244. - Added man page for strongswan.conf
  1245. strongswan-4.4.1
  1246. ----------------
  1247. - Support of xfrm marks in IPsec SAs and IPsec policies introduced
  1248. with the Linux 2.6.34 kernel. For details see the example scenarios
  1249. ikev2/nat-two-rw-mark, ikev2/rw-nat-mark-in-out and ikev2/net2net-psk-dscp.
  1250. - The PLUTO_MARK_IN and PLUTO_ESP_ENC environment variables can be used
  1251. in a user-specific updown script to set marks on inbound ESP or
  1252. ESP_IN_UDP packets.
  1253. - The openssl plugin now supports X.509 certificate and CRL functions.
  1254. - OCSP/CRL checking in IKEv2 has been moved to the revocation plugin, enabled
  1255. by default. Please update manual load directives in strongswan.conf.
  1256. - RFC3779 ipAddrBlock constraint checking has been moved to the addrblock
  1257. plugin, disabled by default. Enable it and update manual load directives
  1258. in strongswan.conf, if required.
  1259. - The pki utility supports CRL generation using the --signcrl command.
  1260. - The ipsec pki --self, --issue and --req commands now support output in
  1261. PEM format using the --outform pem option.
  1262. - The major refactoring of the IKEv1 Mode Config functionality now allows
  1263. the transport and handling of any Mode Config attribute.
  1264. - The RADIUS proxy plugin eap-radius now supports multiple servers. Configured
  1265. servers are chosen randomly, with the option to prefer a specific server.
  1266. Non-responding servers are degraded by the selection process.
  1267. - The ipsec pool tool manages arbitrary configuration attributes stored
  1268. in an SQL database. ipsec pool --help gives the details.
  1269. - The new eap-simaka-sql plugin acts as a backend for EAP-SIM and EAP-AKA,
  1270. reading triplets/quintuplets from an SQL database.
  1271. - The High Availability plugin now supports a HA enabled in-memory address
  1272. pool and Node reintegration without IKE_SA rekeying. The latter allows
  1273. clients without IKE_SA rekeying support to keep connected during
  1274. reintegration. Additionally, many other issues have been fixed in the ha
  1275. plugin.
  1276. - Fixed a potential remote code execution vulnerability resulting from
  1277. the misuse of snprintf(). The vulnerability is exploitable by
  1278. unauthenticated users.
  1279. strongswan-4.4.0
  1280. ----------------
  1281. - The IKEv2 High Availability plugin has been integrated. It provides
  1282. load sharing and failover capabilities in a cluster of currently two nodes,
  1283. based on an extend ClusterIP kernel module. More information is available at
  1284. https://wiki.strongswan.org/projects/strongswan/wiki/HighAvailability.
  1285. The development of the High Availability functionality was sponsored by
  1286. secunet Security Networks AG.
  1287. - Added IKEv1 and IKEv2 configuration support for the AES-GMAC
  1288. authentication-only ESP cipher. Our aes_gmac kernel patch or a Linux
  1289. 2.6.34 kernel is required to make AES-GMAC available via the XFRM
  1290. kernel interface.
  1291. - Added support for Diffie-Hellman groups 22, 23 and 24 to the gmp, gcrypt
  1292. and openssl plugins, usable by both pluto and charon. The new proposal
  1293. keywords are modp1024s160, modp2048s224 and modp2048s256. Thanks to Joy Latten
  1294. from IBM for his contribution.
  1295. - The IKEv1 pluto daemon supports RAM-based virtual IP pools using
  1296. the rightsourceip directive with a subnet from which addresses
  1297. are allocated.
  1298. - The ipsec pki --gen and --pub commands now allow the output of
  1299. private and public keys in PEM format using the --outform pem
  1300. command line option.
  1301. - The new DHCP plugin queries virtual IP addresses for clients from a DHCP
  1302. server using broadcasts, or a defined server using the
  1303. charon.plugins.dhcp.server strongswan.conf option. DNS/WINS server information
  1304. is additionally served to clients if the DHCP server provides such
  1305. information. The plugin is used in ipsec.conf configurations having
  1306. rightsourceip set to %dhcp.
  1307. - A new plugin called farp fakes ARP responses for virtual IP addresses
  1308. handed out to clients from the IKEv2 daemon charon. The plugin lets a
  1309. road-warrior act as a client on the local LAN if it uses a virtual IP
  1310. from the responders subnet, e.g. acquired using the DHCP plugin.
  1311. - The existing IKEv2 socket implementations have been migrated to the
  1312. socket-default and the socket-raw plugins. The new socket-dynamic plugin
  1313. binds sockets dynamically to ports configured via the left-/rightikeport
  1314. ipsec.conf connection parameters.
  1315. - The android charon plugin stores received DNS server information as "net.dns"
  1316. system properties, as used by the Android platform.
  1317. strongswan-4.3.6
  1318. ----------------
  1319. - The IKEv2 daemon supports RFC 3779 IP address block constraints
  1320. carried as a critical X.509v3 extension in the peer certificate.
  1321. - The ipsec pool --add|del dns|nbns command manages DNS and NBNS name
  1322. server entries that are sent via the IKEv1 Mode Config or IKEv2
  1323. Configuration Payload to remote clients.
  1324. - The Camellia cipher can be used as an IKEv1 encryption algorithm.
  1325. - The IKEv1 and IKEV2 daemons now check certificate path length constraints.
  1326. - The new ipsec.conf conn option "inactivity" closes a CHILD_SA if no traffic
  1327. was sent or received within the given interval. To close the complete IKE_SA
  1328. if its only CHILD_SA was inactive, set the global strongswan.conf option
  1329. "charon.inactivity_close_ike" to yes.
  1330. - More detailed IKEv2 EAP payload information in debug output
  1331. - IKEv2 EAP-SIM and EAP-AKA share joint libsimaka library
  1332. - Added required userland changes for proper SHA256 and SHA384/512 in ESP that
  1333. will be introduced with Linux 2.6.33. The "sha256"/"sha2_256" keyword now
  1334. configures the kernel with 128 bit truncation, not the non-standard 96
  1335. bit truncation used by previous releases. To use the old 96 bit truncation
  1336. scheme, the new "sha256_96" proposal keyword has been introduced.
  1337. - Fixed IPComp in tunnel mode, stripping out the duplicated outer header. This
  1338. change makes IPcomp tunnel mode connections incompatible with previous
  1339. releases; disable compression on such tunnels.
  1340. - Fixed BEET mode connections on recent kernels by installing SAs with
  1341. appropriate traffic selectors, based on a patch by Michael Rossberg.
  1342. - Using extensions (such as BEET mode) and crypto algorithms (such as twofish,
  1343. serpent, sha256_96) allocated in the private use space now require that we
  1344. know its meaning, i.e. we are talking to strongSwan. Use the new
  1345. "charon.send_vendor_id" option in strongswan.conf to let the remote peer know
  1346. this is the case.
  1347. - Experimental support for draft-eronen-ipsec-ikev2-eap-auth, where the
  1348. responder omits public key authentication in favor of a mutual authentication
  1349. method. To enable EAP-only authentication, set rightauth=eap on the responder
  1350. to rely only on the MSK constructed AUTH payload. This not-yet standardized
  1351. extension requires the strongSwan vendor ID introduced above.
  1352. - The IKEv1 daemon ignores the Juniper SRX notification type 40001, thus
  1353. allowing interoperability.
  1354. strongswan-4.3.5
  1355. ----------------
  1356. - The IKEv1 pluto daemon can now use SQL-based address pools to deal out
  1357. virtual IP addresses as a Mode Config server. The pool capability has been
  1358. migrated from charon's sql plugin to a new attr-sql plugin which is loaded
  1359. by libstrongswan and which can be used by both daemons either with a SQLite
  1360. or MySQL database and the corresponding plugin.
  1361. - Plugin names have been streamlined: EAP plugins now have a dash after eap
  1362. (e.g. eap-sim), as it is used with the --enable-eap-sim ./configure option.
  1363. Plugin configuration sections in strongswan.conf now use the same name as the
  1364. plugin itself (i.e. with a dash). Make sure to update "load" directives and
  1365. the affected plugin sections in existing strongswan.conf files.
  1366. - The private/public key parsing and encoding has been split up into
  1367. separate pkcs1, pgp, pem and dnskey plugins. The public key implementation
  1368. plugins gmp, gcrypt and openssl can all make use of them.
  1369. - The EAP-AKA plugin can use different backends for USIM/quintuplet
  1370. calculations, very similar to the EAP-SIM plugin. The existing 3GPP2 software
  1371. implementation has been migrated to a separate plugin.
  1372. - The IKEv2 daemon charon gained basic PGP support. It can use locally installed
  1373. peer certificates and can issue signatures based on RSA private keys.
  1374. - The new 'ipsec pki' tool provides a set of commands to maintain a public
  1375. key infrastructure. It currently supports operations to create RSA and ECDSA
  1376. private/public keys, calculate fingerprints and issue or verify certificates.
  1377. - Charon uses a monotonic time source for statistics and job queueing, behaving
  1378. correctly if the system time changes (e.g. when using NTP).
  1379. - In addition to time based rekeying, charon supports IPsec SA lifetimes based
  1380. on processed volume or number of packets. They new ipsec.conf parameters
  1381. 'lifetime' (an alias to 'keylife'), 'lifebytes' and 'lifepackets' handle
  1382. SA timeouts, while the parameters 'margintime' (an alias to rekeymargin),
  1383. 'marginbytes' and 'marginpackets' trigger the rekeying before a SA expires.
  1384. The existing parameter 'rekeyfuzz' affects all margins.
  1385. - If no CA/Gateway certificate is specified in the NetworkManager plugin,
  1386. charon uses a set of trusted root certificates preinstalled by distributions.
  1387. The directory containing CA certificates can be specified using the
  1388. --with-nm-ca-dir=path configure option.
  1389. - Fixed the encoding of the Email relative distinguished name in left|rightid
  1390. statements.
  1391. - Fixed the broken parsing of PKCS#7 wrapped certificates by the pluto daemon.
  1392. - Fixed smartcard-based authentication in the pluto daemon which was broken by
  1393. the ECDSA support introduced with the 4.3.2 release.
  1394. - A patch contributed by Heiko Hund fixes mixed IPv6 in IPv4 and vice versa
  1395. tunnels established with the IKEv1 pluto daemon.
  1396. - The pluto daemon now uses the libstrongswan x509 plugin for certificates and
  1397. CRls and the struct id type was replaced by identification_t used by charon
  1398. and the libstrongswan library.
  1399. strongswan-4.3.4
  1400. ----------------
  1401. - IKEv2 charon daemon ported to FreeBSD and Mac OS X. Installation details can
  1402. be found on wiki.strongswan.org.
  1403. - ipsec statusall shows the number of bytes transmitted and received over
  1404. ESP connections configured by the IKEv2 charon daemon.
  1405. - The IKEv2 charon daemon supports include files in ipsec.secrets.
  1406. strongswan-4.3.3
  1407. ----------------
  1408. - The configuration option --enable-integrity-test plus the strongswan.conf
  1409. option libstrongswan.integrity_test = yes activate integrity tests
  1410. of the IKE daemons charon and pluto, libstrongswan and all loaded
  1411. plugins. Thus dynamic library misconfigurations and non-malicious file
  1412. manipulations can be reliably detected.
  1413. - The new default setting libstrongswan.ecp_x_coordinate_only=yes allows
  1414. IKEv1 interoperability with MS Windows using the ECP DH groups 19 and 20.
  1415. - The IKEv1 pluto daemon now supports the AES-CCM and AES-GCM ESP
  1416. authenticated encryption algorithms.
  1417. - The IKEv1 pluto daemon now supports V4 OpenPGP keys.
  1418. - The RDN parser vulnerability discovered by Orange Labs research team
  1419. was not completely fixed in version 4.3.2. Some more modifications
  1420. had to be applied to the asn1_length() function to make it robust.
  1421. strongswan-4.3.2
  1422. ----------------
  1423. - The new gcrypt plugin provides symmetric cipher, hasher, RNG, Diffie-Hellman
  1424. and RSA crypto primitives using the LGPL licensed GNU gcrypt library.
  1425. - libstrongswan features an integrated crypto selftest framework for registered
  1426. algorithms. The test-vector plugin provides a first set of test vectors and
  1427. allows pluto and charon to rely on tested crypto algorithms.
  1428. - pluto can now use all libstrongswan plugins with the exception of x509 and xcbc.
  1429. Thanks to the openssl plugin, the ECP Diffie-Hellman groups 19, 20, 21, 25, and
  1430. 26 as well as ECDSA-256, ECDSA-384, and ECDSA-521 authentication can be used
  1431. with IKEv1.
  1432. - Applying their fuzzing tool, the Orange Labs vulnerability research team found
  1433. another two DoS vulnerabilities, one in the rather old ASN.1 parser of Relative
  1434. Distinguished Names (RDNs) and a second one in the conversion of ASN.1 UTCTIME
  1435. and GENERALIZEDTIME strings to a time_t value.
  1436. strongswan-4.3.1
  1437. ----------------
  1438. - The nm plugin now passes DNS/NBNS server information to NetworkManager,
  1439. allowing a gateway administrator to set DNS/NBNS configuration on clients
  1440. dynamically.
  1441. - The nm plugin also accepts CA certificates for gateway authentication. If
  1442. a CA certificate is configured, strongSwan uses the entered gateway address
  1443. as its idenitity, requiring the gateways certificate to contain the same as
  1444. subjectAltName. This allows a gateway administrator to deploy the same
  1445. certificates to Windows 7 and NetworkManager clients.
  1446. - The command ipsec purgeike deletes IKEv2 SAs that don't have a CHILD SA.
  1447. The command ipsec down <conn>{n} deletes CHILD SA instance n of connection
  1448. <conn> whereas ipsec down <conn>{*} deletes all CHILD SA instances.
  1449. The command ipsec down <conn>[n] deletes IKE SA instance n of connection
  1450. <conn> plus dependent CHILD SAs whereas ipsec down <conn>[*] deletes all
  1451. IKE SA instances of connection <conn>.
  1452. - Fixed a regression introduced in 4.3.0 where EAP authentication calculated
  1453. the AUTH payload incorrectly. Further, the EAP-MSCHAPv2 MSK key derivation
  1454. has been updated to be compatible with the Windows 7 Release Candidate.
  1455. - Refactored installation of triggering policies. Routed policies are handled
  1456. outside of IKE_SAs to keep them installed in any case. A tunnel gets
  1457. established only once, even if initiation is delayed due network outages.
  1458. - Improved the handling of multiple acquire signals triggered by the kernel.
  1459. - Fixed two DoS vulnerabilities in the charon daemon that were discovered by
  1460. fuzzing techniques: 1) Sending a malformed IKE_SA_INIT request leaved an
  1461. incomplete state which caused a null pointer dereference if a subsequent
  1462. CREATE_CHILD_SA request was sent. 2) Sending an IKE_AUTH request with either
  1463. a missing TSi or TSr payload caused a null pointer dereference because the
  1464. checks for TSi and TSr were interchanged. The IKEv2 fuzzer used was
  1465. developed by the Orange Labs vulnerability research team. The tool was
  1466. initially written by Gabriel Campana and is now maintained by Laurent Butti.
  1467. - Added support for AES counter mode in ESP in IKEv2 using the proposal
  1468. keywords aes128ctr, aes192ctr and aes256ctr.
  1469. - Further progress in refactoring pluto: Use of the curl and ldap plugins
  1470. for fetching crls and OCSP. Use of the random plugin to get keying material
  1471. from /dev/random or /dev/urandom. Use of the openssl plugin as an alternative
  1472. to the aes, des, sha1, sha2, and md5 plugins. The blowfish, twofish, and
  1473. serpent encryption plugins are now optional and are not enabled by default.
  1474. strongswan-4.3.0
  1475. ----------------
  1476. - Support for the IKEv2 Multiple Authentication Exchanges extension (RFC4739).
  1477. Initiators and responders can use several authentication rounds (e.g. RSA
  1478. followed by EAP) to authenticate. The new ipsec.conf leftauth/rightauth and
  1479. leftauth2/rightauth2 parameters define own authentication rounds or setup
  1480. constraints for the remote peer. See the ipsec.conf man page for more detials.
  1481. - If glibc printf hooks (register_printf_function) are not available,
  1482. strongSwan can use the vstr string library to run on non-glibc systems.
  1483. - The IKEv2 charon daemon can now configure the ESP CAMELLIA-CBC cipher
  1484. (esp=camellia128|192|256).
  1485. - Refactored the pluto and scepclient code to use basic functions (memory
  1486. allocation, leak detective, chunk handling, printf_hooks, strongswan.conf
  1487. attributes, ASN.1 parser, etc.) from the libstrongswan library.
  1488. - Up to two DNS and WINS servers to be sent via IKEv1 ModeConfig can be
  1489. configured in the pluto section of strongswan.conf.
  1490. strongswan-4.2.14
  1491. -----------------
  1492. - The new server-side EAP RADIUS plugin (--enable-eap-radius)
  1493. relays EAP messages to and from a RADIUS server. Successfully
  1494. tested with with a freeradius server using EAP-MD5 and EAP-SIM.
  1495. - A vulnerability in the Dead Peer Detection (RFC 3706) code was found by
  1496. Gerd v. Egidy <gerd.von.egidy@intra2net.com> of Intra2net AG affecting
  1497. all Openswan and strongSwan releases. A malicious (or expired ISAKMP)
  1498. R_U_THERE or R_U_THERE_ACK Dead Peer Detection packet can cause the
  1499. pluto IKE daemon to crash and restart. No authentication or encryption
  1500. is required to trigger this bug. One spoofed UDP packet can cause the
  1501. pluto IKE daemon to restart and be unresponsive for a few seconds while
  1502. restarting. This DPD null state vulnerability has been officially
  1503. registered as CVE-2009-0790 and is fixed by this release.
  1504. - ASN.1 to time_t conversion caused a time wrap-around for
  1505. dates after Jan 18 03:14:07 UTC 2038 on 32-bit platforms.
  1506. As a workaround such dates are set to the maximum representable
  1507. time, i.e. Jan 19 03:14:07 UTC 2038.
  1508. - Distinguished Names containing wildcards (*) are not sent in the
  1509. IDr payload anymore.
  1510. strongswan-4.2.13
  1511. -----------------
  1512. - Fixed a use-after-free bug in the DPD timeout section of the
  1513. IKEv1 pluto daemon which sporadically caused a segfault.
  1514. - Fixed a crash in the IKEv2 charon daemon occurring with
  1515. mixed RAM-based and SQL-based virtual IP address pools.
  1516. - Fixed ASN.1 parsing of algorithmIdentifier objects where the
  1517. parameters field is optional.
  1518. - Ported nm plugin to NetworkManager 7.1.
  1519. strongswan-4.2.12
  1520. -----------------
  1521. - Support of the EAP-MSCHAPv2 protocol enabled by the option
  1522. --enable-eap-mschapv2. Requires the MD4 hash algorithm enabled
  1523. either by --enable-md4 or --enable-openssl.
  1524. - Assignment of up to two DNS and up to two WINS servers to peers via
  1525. the IKEv2 Configuration Payload (CP). The IPv4 or IPv6 nameserver
  1526. addresses are defined in strongswan.conf.
  1527. - The strongSwan applet for the Gnome NetworkManager is now built and
  1528. distributed as a separate tarball under the name NetworkManager-strongswan.
  1529. strongswan-4.2.11
  1530. -----------------
  1531. - Fixed ESP NULL encryption broken by the refactoring of keymat.c.
  1532. Also introduced proper initialization and disposal of keying material.
  1533. - Fixed the missing listing of connection definitions in ipsec statusall
  1534. broken by an unfortunate local variable overload.
  1535. strongswan-4.2.10
  1536. -----------------
  1537. - Several performance improvements to handle thousands of tunnels with almost
  1538. linear upscaling. All relevant data structures have been replaced by faster
  1539. counterparts with better lookup times.
  1540. - Better parallelization to run charon on multiple cores. Due to improved
  1541. resource locking and other optimizations the daemon can take full
  1542. advantage of 16 or even more cores.
  1543. - The load-tester plugin can use a NULL Diffie-Hellman group and simulate
  1544. unique identities and certificates by signing peer certificates using a CA
  1545. on the fly.
  1546. - The redesigned stroke in-memory IP pool handles leases. The "ipsec leases"
  1547. command queries assigned leases.
  1548. - Added support for smartcards in charon by using the ENGINE API provided by
  1549. OpenSSL, based on patches by Michael Roßberg.
  1550. - The Padlock plugin supports the hardware RNG found on VIA CPUs to provide a
  1551. reliable source of randomness.
  1552. strongswan-4.2.9
  1553. ----------------
  1554. - Flexible configuration of logging subsystem allowing to log to multiple
  1555. syslog facilities or to files using fine-grained log levels for each target.
  1556. - Load testing plugin to do stress testing of the IKEv2 daemon against self
  1557. or another host. Found and fixed issues during tests in the multi-threaded
  1558. use of the OpenSSL plugin.
  1559. - Added profiling code to synchronization primitives to find bottlenecks if
  1560. running on multiple cores. Found and fixed an issue where parts of the
  1561. Diffie-Hellman calculation acquired an exclusive lock. This greatly improves
  1562. parallelization to multiple cores.
  1563. - updown script invocation has been separated into a plugin of its own to
  1564. further slim down the daemon core.
  1565. - Separated IKE_SA/CHILD_SA key derivation process into a closed system,
  1566. allowing future implementations to use a secured environment in e.g. kernel
  1567. memory or hardware.
  1568. - The kernel interface of charon has been modularized. XFRM NETLINK (default)
  1569. and PFKEY (--enable-kernel-pfkey) interface plugins for the native IPsec
  1570. stack of the Linux 2.6 kernel as well as a PFKEY interface for the KLIPS
  1571. IPsec stack (--enable-kernel-klips) are provided.
  1572. - Basic Mobile IPv6 support has been introduced, securing Binding Update
  1573. messages as well as tunneled traffic between Mobile Node and Home Agent.
  1574. The installpolicy=no option allows peaceful cooperation with a dominant
  1575. mip6d daemon and the new type=transport_proxy implements the special MIPv6
  1576. IPsec transport proxy mode where the IKEv2 daemon uses the Care-of-Address
  1577. but the IPsec SA is set up for the Home Address.
  1578. - Implemented migration of Mobile IPv6 connections using the KMADDRESS
  1579. field contained in XFRM_MSG_MIGRATE messages sent by the mip6d daemon
  1580. via the Linux 2.6.28 (or appropriately patched) kernel.
  1581. strongswan-4.2.8
  1582. ----------------
  1583. - IKEv2 charon daemon supports authentication based on raw public keys
  1584. stored in the SQL database backend. The ipsec listpubkeys command
  1585. lists the available raw public keys via the stroke interface.
  1586. - Several MOBIKE improvements: Detect changes in NAT mappings in DPD exchanges,
  1587. handle events if kernel detects NAT mapping changes in UDP-encapsulated
  1588. ESP packets (requires kernel patch), reuse old addresses in MOBIKE updates as
  1589. long as possible and other fixes.
  1590. - Fixed a bug in addr_in_subnet() which caused insertion of wrong source
  1591. routes for destination subnets having netwmasks not being a multiple of 8 bits.
  1592. Thanks go to Wolfgang Steudel, TU Ilmenau for reporting this bug.
  1593. strongswan-4.2.7
  1594. ----------------
  1595. - Fixed a Denial-of-Service vulnerability where an IKE_SA_INIT message with
  1596. a KE payload containing zeroes only can cause a crash of the IKEv2 charon
  1597. daemon due to a NULL pointer returned by the mpz_export() function of the
  1598. GNU Multiprecision Library (GMP). Thanks go to Mu Dynamics Research Labs
  1599. for making us aware of this problem.
  1600. - The new agent plugin provides a private key implementation on top of an
  1601. ssh-agent.
  1602. - The NetworkManager plugin has been extended to support certificate client
  1603. authentication using RSA keys loaded from a file or using ssh-agent.
  1604. - Daemon capability dropping has been ported to libcap and must be enabled
  1605. explicitly --with-capabilities=libcap. Future version will support the
  1606. newer libcap2 library.
  1607. - ipsec listalgs lists the IKEv2 cryptografic algorithms registered with the
  1608. charon keying daemon.
  1609. strongswan-4.2.6
  1610. ----------------
  1611. - A NetworkManager plugin allows GUI-based configuration of road-warrior
  1612. clients in a simple way. It features X509 based gateway authentication
  1613. and EAP client authentication, tunnel setup/teardown and storing passwords
  1614. in the Gnome Keyring.
  1615. - A new EAP-GTC plugin implements draft-sheffer-ikev2-gtc-00.txt and allows
  1616. username/password authentication against any PAM service on the gateway.
  1617. The new EAP method interacts nicely with the NetworkManager plugin and allows
  1618. client authentication against e.g. LDAP.
  1619. - Improved support for the EAP-Identity method. The new ipsec.conf eap_identity
  1620. parameter defines an additional identity to pass to the server in EAP
  1621. authentication.
  1622. - The "ipsec statusall" command now lists CA restrictions, EAP
  1623. authentication types and EAP identities.
  1624. - Fixed two multithreading deadlocks occurring when starting up
  1625. several hundred tunnels concurrently.
  1626. - Fixed the --enable-integrity-test configure option which
  1627. computes a SHA-1 checksum over the libstrongswan library.
  1628. strongswan-4.2.5
  1629. ----------------
  1630. - Consistent logging of IKE and CHILD SAs at the audit (AUD) level.
  1631. - Improved the performance of the SQL-based virtual IP address pool
  1632. by introducing an additional addresses table. The leases table
  1633. storing only history information has become optional and can be
  1634. disabled by setting charon.plugins.sql.lease_history = no in
  1635. strongswan.conf.
  1636. - The XFRM_STATE_AF_UNSPEC flag added to xfrm.h allows IPv4-over-IPv6
  1637. and IPv6-over-IPv4 tunnels with the 2.6.26 and later Linux kernels.
  1638. - management of different virtual IP pools for different
  1639. network interfaces have become possible.
  1640. - fixed a bug which prevented the assignment of more than 256
  1641. virtual IP addresses from a pool managed by an sql database.
  1642. - fixed a bug which did not delete own IPCOMP SAs in the kernel.
  1643. strongswan-4.2.4
  1644. ----------------
  1645. - Added statistics functions to ipsec pool --status and ipsec pool --leases
  1646. and input validation checks to various ipsec pool commands.
  1647. - ipsec statusall now lists all loaded charon plugins and displays
  1648. the negotiated IKEv2 cipher suite proposals.
  1649. - The openssl plugin supports the elliptic curve Diffie-Hellman groups
  1650. 19, 20, 21, 25, and 26.
  1651. - The openssl plugin supports ECDSA authentication using elliptic curve
  1652. X.509 certificates.
  1653. - Fixed a bug in stroke which caused multiple charon threads to close
  1654. the file descriptors during packet transfers over the stroke socket.
  1655. - ESP sequence numbers are now migrated in IPsec SA updates handled by
  1656. MOBIKE. Works only with Linux kernels >= 2.6.17.
  1657. strongswan-4.2.3
  1658. ----------------
  1659. - Fixed the strongswan.conf path configuration problem that occurred when
  1660. --sysconfig was not set explicitly in ./configure.
  1661. - Fixed a number of minor bugs that where discovered during the 4th
  1662. IKEv2 interoperability workshop in San Antonio, TX.
  1663. strongswan-4.2.2
  1664. ----------------
  1665. - Plugins for libstrongswan and charon can optionally be loaded according
  1666. to a configuration in strongswan.conf. Most components provide a
  1667. "load = " option followed by a space separated list of plugins to load.
  1668. This allows e.g. the fallback from a hardware crypto accelerator to
  1669. to software-based crypto plugins.
  1670. - Charons SQL plugin has been extended by a virtual IP address pool.
  1671. Configurations with a rightsourceip=%poolname setting query a SQLite or
  1672. MySQL database for leases. The "ipsec pool" command helps in administrating
  1673. the pool database. See ipsec pool --help for the available options
  1674. - The Authenticated Encryption Algorithms AES-CCM-8/12/16 and AES-GCM-8/12/16
  1675. for ESP are now supported starting with the Linux 2.6.25 kernel. The
  1676. syntax is e.g. esp=aes128ccm12 or esp=aes256gcm16.
  1677. strongswan-4.2.1
  1678. ----------------
  1679. - Support for "Hash and URL" encoded certificate payloads has been implemented
  1680. in the IKEv2 daemon charon. Using the "certuribase" option of a CA section
  1681. allows to assign a base URL to all certificates issued by the specified CA.
  1682. The final URL is then built by concatenating that base and the hex encoded
  1683. SHA1 hash of the DER encoded certificate. Note that this feature is disabled
  1684. by default and must be enabled using the option "charon.hash_and_url".
  1685. - The IKEv2 daemon charon now supports the "uniqueids" option to close multiple
  1686. IKE_SAs with the same peer. The option value "keep" prefers existing
  1687. connection setups over new ones, where the value "replace" replaces existing
  1688. connections.
  1689. - The crypto factory in libstrongswan additionally supports random number
  1690. generators, plugins may provide other sources of randomness. The default
  1691. plugin reads raw random data from /dev/(u)random.
  1692. - Extended the credential framework by a caching option to allow plugins
  1693. persistent caching of fetched credentials. The "cachecrl" option has been
  1694. re-implemented.
  1695. - The new trustchain verification introduced in 4.2.0 has been parallelized.
  1696. Threads fetching CRL or OCSP information no longer block other threads.
  1697. - A new IKEv2 configuration attribute framework has been introduced allowing
  1698. plugins to provide virtual IP addresses, and in the future, other
  1699. configuration attribute services (e.g. DNS/WINS servers).
  1700. - The stroke plugin has been extended to provide virtual IP addresses from
  1701. a pool defined in ipsec.conf. The "rightsourceip" parameter now accepts
  1702. address pools in CIDR notation (e.g. 10.1.1.0/24). The parameter also accepts
  1703. the value "%poolname", where "poolname" identifies a pool provided by a
  1704. separate plugin.
  1705. - Fixed compilation on uClibc and a couple of other minor bugs.
  1706. - Set DPD defaults in ipsec starter to dpd_delay=30s and dpd_timeout=150s.
  1707. - The IKEv1 pluto daemon now supports the ESP encryption algorithm CAMELLIA
  1708. with key lengths of 128, 192, and 256 bits, as well as the authentication
  1709. algorithm AES_XCBC_MAC. Configuration example: esp=camellia192-aesxcbc.
  1710. strongswan-4.2.0
  1711. ----------------
  1712. - libstrongswan has been modularized to attach crypto algorithms,
  1713. credential implementations (keys, certificates) and fetchers dynamically
  1714. through plugins. Existing code has been ported to plugins:
  1715. - RSA/Diffie-Hellman implementation using the GNU Multi Precision library
  1716. - X509 certificate system supporting CRLs, OCSP and attribute certificates
  1717. - Multiple plugins providing crypto algorithms in software
  1718. - CURL and OpenLDAP fetcher
  1719. - libstrongswan gained a relational database API which uses pluggable database
  1720. providers. Plugins for MySQL and SQLite are available.
  1721. - The IKEv2 keying daemon charon is more extensible. Generic plugins may provide
  1722. connection configuration, credentials and EAP methods or control the daemon.
  1723. Existing code has been ported to plugins:
  1724. - EAP-AKA, EAP-SIM, EAP-MD5 and EAP-Identity
  1725. - stroke configuration, credential and control (compatible to pluto)
  1726. - XML bases management protocol to control and query the daemon
  1727. The following new plugins are available:
  1728. - An experimental SQL configuration, credential and logging plugin on
  1729. top of either MySQL or SQLite
  1730. - A unit testing plugin to run tests at daemon startup
  1731. - The authentication and credential framework in charon has been heavily
  1732. refactored to support modular credential providers, proper
  1733. CERTREQ/CERT payload exchanges and extensible authorization rules.
  1734. - The framework of strongSwan Manager has evolved to the web application
  1735. framework libfast (FastCGI Application Server w/ Templates) and is usable
  1736. by other applications.
  1737. strongswan-4.1.11
  1738. -----------------
  1739. - IKE rekeying in NAT situations did not inherit the NAT conditions
  1740. to the rekeyed IKE_SA so that the UDP encapsulation was lost with
  1741. the next CHILD_SA rekeying.
  1742. - Wrong type definition of the next_payload variable in id_payload.c
  1743. caused an INVALID_SYNTAX error on PowerPC platforms.
  1744. - Implemented IKEv2 EAP-SIM server and client test modules that use
  1745. triplets stored in a file. For details on the configuration see
  1746. the scenario 'ikev2/rw-eap-sim-rsa'.
  1747. strongswan-4.1.10
  1748. -----------------
  1749. - Fixed error in the ordering of the certinfo_t records in the ocsp cache that
  1750. caused multiple entries of the same serial number to be created.
  1751. - Implementation of a simple EAP-MD5 module which provides CHAP
  1752. authentication. This may be interesting in conjunction with certificate
  1753. based server authentication, as weak passwords can't be brute forced
  1754. (in contradiction to traditional IKEv2 PSK).
  1755. - A complete software based implementation of EAP-AKA, using algorithms
  1756. specified in 3GPP2 (S.S0055). This implementation does not use an USIM,
  1757. but reads the secrets from ipsec.secrets. Make sure to read eap_aka.h
  1758. before using it.
  1759. - Support for vendor specific EAP methods using Expanded EAP types. The
  1760. interface to EAP modules has been slightly changed, so make sure to
  1761. check the changes if you're already rolling your own modules.
  1762. strongswan-4.1.9
  1763. ----------------
  1764. - The default _updown script now dynamically inserts and removes ip6tables
  1765. firewall rules if leftfirewall=yes is set in IPv6 connections. New IPv6
  1766. net-net and roadwarrior (PSK/RSA) scenarios for both IKEv1 and IKEV2 were
  1767. added.
  1768. - Implemented RFC4478 repeated authentication to force EAP/Virtual-IP clients
  1769. to reestablish an IKE_SA within a given timeframe.
  1770. - strongSwan Manager supports configuration listing, initiation and termination
  1771. of IKE and CHILD_SAs.
  1772. - Fixes and improvements to multithreading code.
  1773. - IKEv2 plugins have been renamed to libcharon-* to avoid naming conflicts.
  1774. Make sure to remove the old plugins in $libexecdir/ipsec, otherwise they get
  1775. loaded twice.
  1776. strongswan-4.1.8
  1777. ----------------
  1778. - Removed recursive pthread mutexes since uClibc doesn't support them.
  1779. strongswan-4.1.7
  1780. ----------------
  1781. - In NAT traversal situations and multiple queued Quick Modes,
  1782. those pending connections inserted by auto=start after the
  1783. port floating from 500 to 4500 were erroneously deleted.
  1784. - Added a "forceencaps" connection parameter to enforce UDP encapsulation
  1785. to surmount restrictive firewalls. NAT detection payloads are faked to
  1786. simulate a NAT situation and trick the other peer into NAT mode (IKEv2 only).
  1787. - Preview of strongSwan Manager, a web based configuration and monitoring
  1788. application. It uses a new XML control interface to query the IKEv2 daemon
  1789. (see https://wiki.strongswan.org/wiki/Manager).
  1790. - Experimental SQLite configuration backend which will provide the configuration
  1791. interface for strongSwan Manager in future releases.
  1792. - Further improvements to MOBIKE support.
  1793. strongswan-4.1.6
  1794. ----------------
  1795. - Since some third party IKEv2 implementations run into
  1796. problems with strongSwan announcing MOBIKE capability per
  1797. default, MOBIKE can be disabled on a per-connection-basis
  1798. using the mobike=no option. Whereas mobike=no disables the
  1799. sending of the MOBIKE_SUPPORTED notification and the floating
  1800. to UDP port 4500 with the IKE_AUTH request even if no NAT
  1801. situation has been detected, strongSwan will still support
  1802. MOBIKE acting as a responder.
  1803. - the default ipsec routing table plus its corresponding priority
  1804. used for inserting source routes has been changed from 100 to 220.
  1805. It can be configured using the --with-ipsec-routing-table and
  1806. --with-ipsec-routing-table-prio options.
  1807. - the --enable-integrity-test configure option tests the
  1808. integrity of the libstrongswan crypto code during the charon
  1809. startup.
  1810. - the --disable-xauth-vid configure option disables the sending
  1811. of the XAUTH vendor ID. This can be used as a workaround when
  1812. interoperating with some Windows VPN clients that get into
  1813. trouble upon reception of an XAUTH VID without eXtended
  1814. AUTHentication having been configured.
  1815. - ipsec stroke now supports the rereadsecrets, rereadaacerts,
  1816. rereadacerts, and listacerts options.
  1817. strongswan-4.1.5
  1818. ----------------
  1819. - If a DNS lookup failure occurs when resolving right=%<FQDN>
  1820. or right=<FQDN> combined with rightallowany=yes then the
  1821. connection is not updated by ipsec starter thus preventing
  1822. the disruption of an active IPsec connection. Only if the DNS
  1823. lookup successfully returns with a changed IP address the
  1824. corresponding connection definition is updated.
  1825. - Routes installed by the keying daemons are now in a separate
  1826. routing table with the ID 100 to avoid conflicts with the main
  1827. table. Route lookup for IKEv2 traffic is done in userspace to ignore
  1828. routes installed for IPsec, as IKE traffic shouldn't get encapsulated.
  1829. strongswan-4.1.4
  1830. ----------------
  1831. - The pluto IKEv1 daemon now exhibits the same behaviour as its
  1832. IKEv2 companion charon by inserting an explicit route via the
  1833. _updown script only if a sourceip exists. This is admissible
  1834. since routing through the IPsec tunnel is handled automatically
  1835. by NETKEY's IPsec policies. As a consequence the left|rightnexthop
  1836. parameter is not required any more.
  1837. - The new IKEv1 parameter right|leftallowany parameters helps to handle
  1838. the case where both peers possess dynamic IP addresses that are
  1839. usually resolved using DynDNS or a similar service. The configuration
  1840. right=peer.foo.bar
  1841. rightallowany=yes
  1842. can be used by the initiator to start up a connection to a peer
  1843. by resolving peer.foo.bar into the currently allocated IP address.
  1844. Thanks to the rightallowany flag the connection behaves later on
  1845. as
  1846. right=%any
  1847. so that the peer can rekey the connection as an initiator when his
  1848. IP address changes. An alternative notation is
  1849. right=%peer.foo.bar
  1850. which will implicitly set rightallowany=yes.
  1851. - ipsec starter now fails more gracefully in the presence of parsing
  1852. errors. Flawed ca and conn section are discarded and pluto is started
  1853. if non-fatal errors only were encountered. If right=%peer.foo.bar
  1854. cannot be resolved by DNS then right=%any will be used so that passive
  1855. connections as a responder are still possible.
  1856. - The new pkcs11initargs parameter that can be placed in the
  1857. setup config section of /etc/ipsec.conf allows the definition
  1858. of an argument string that is used with the PKCS#11 C_Initialize()
  1859. function. This non-standard feature is required by the NSS softoken
  1860. library. This patch was contributed by Robert Varga.
  1861. - Fixed a bug in ipsec starter introduced by strongswan-2.8.5
  1862. which caused a segmentation fault in the presence of unknown
  1863. or misspelt keywords in ipsec.conf. This bug fix was contributed
  1864. by Robert Varga.
  1865. - Partial support for MOBIKE in IKEv2. The initiator acts on interface/
  1866. address configuration changes and updates IKE and IPsec SAs dynamically.
  1867. strongswan-4.1.3
  1868. ----------------
  1869. - IKEv2 peer configuration selection now can be based on a given
  1870. certification authority using the rightca= statement.
  1871. - IKEv2 authentication based on RSA signatures now can handle multiple
  1872. certificates issued for a given peer ID. This allows a smooth transition
  1873. in the case of a peer certificate renewal.
  1874. - IKEv2: Support for requesting a specific virtual IP using leftsourceip on the
  1875. client and returning requested virtual IPs using rightsourceip=%config
  1876. on the server. If the server does not support configuration payloads, the
  1877. client enforces its leftsourceip parameter.
  1878. - The ./configure options --with-uid/--with-gid allow pluto and charon
  1879. to drop their privileges to a minimum and change to an other UID/GID. This
  1880. improves the systems security, as a possible intruder may only get the
  1881. CAP_NET_ADMIN capability.
  1882. - Further modularization of charon: Pluggable control interface and
  1883. configuration backend modules provide extensibility. The control interface
  1884. for stroke is included, and further interfaces using DBUS (NetworkManager)
  1885. or XML are on the way. A backend for storing configurations in the daemon
  1886. is provided and more advanced backends (using e.g. a database) are trivial
  1887. to implement.
  1888. - Fixed a compilation failure in libfreeswan occurring with Linux kernel
  1889. headers > 2.6.17.
  1890. strongswan-4.1.2
  1891. ----------------
  1892. - Support for an additional Diffie-Hellman exchange when creating/rekeying
  1893. a CHILD_SA in IKEv2 (PFS). PFS is enabled when the proposal contains a
  1894. DH group (e.g. "esp=aes128-sha1-modp1536"). Further, DH group negotiation
  1895. is implemented properly for rekeying.
  1896. - Support for the AES-XCBC-96 MAC algorithm for IPsec SAs when using IKEv2
  1897. (requires linux >= 2.6.20). It is enabled using e.g. "esp=aes256-aesxcbc".
  1898. - Working IPv4-in-IPv6 and IPv6-in-IPv4 tunnels for linux >= 2.6.21.
  1899. - Added support for EAP modules which do not establish an MSK.
  1900. - Removed the dependencies from the /usr/include/linux/ headers by
  1901. including xfrm.h, ipsec.h, and pfkeyv2.h in the distribution.
  1902. - crlNumber is now listed by ipsec listcrls
  1903. - The xauth_modules.verify_secret() function now passes the
  1904. connection name.
  1905. strongswan-4.1.1
  1906. ----------------
  1907. - Server side cookie support. If to may IKE_SAs are in CONNECTING state,
  1908. cookies are enabled and protect against DoS attacks with faked source
  1909. addresses. Number of IKE_SAs in CONNECTING state is also limited per
  1910. peer address to avoid resource exhaustion. IKE_SA_INIT messages are
  1911. compared to properly detect retransmissions and incoming retransmits are
  1912. detected even if the IKE_SA is blocked (e.g. doing OCSP fetches).
  1913. - The IKEv2 daemon charon now supports dynamic http- and ldap-based CRL
  1914. fetching enabled by crlcheckinterval > 0 and caching fetched CRLs
  1915. enabled by cachecrls=yes.
  1916. - Added the configuration options --enable-nat-transport which enables
  1917. the potentially insecure NAT traversal for IPsec transport mode and
  1918. --disable-vendor-id which disables the sending of the strongSwan
  1919. vendor ID.
  1920. - Fixed a long-standing bug in the pluto IKEv1 daemon which caused
  1921. a segmentation fault if a malformed payload was detected in the
  1922. IKE MR2 message and pluto tried to send an encrypted notification
  1923. message.
  1924. - Added the NATT_IETF_02_N Vendor ID in order to support IKEv1 connections
  1925. with Windows 2003 Server which uses a wrong VID hash.
  1926. strongswan-4.1.0
  1927. ----------------
  1928. - Support of SHA2_384 hash function for protecting IKEv1
  1929. negotiations and support of SHA2 signatures in X.509 certificates.
  1930. - Fixed a serious bug in the computation of the SHA2-512 HMAC
  1931. function. Introduced automatic self-test of all IKEv1 hash
  1932. and hmac functions during pluto startup. Failure of a self-test
  1933. currently issues a warning only but does not exit pluto [yet].
  1934. - Support for SHA2-256/384/512 PRF and HMAC functions in IKEv2.
  1935. - Full support of CA information sections. ipsec listcainfos
  1936. now shows all collected crlDistributionPoints and OCSP
  1937. accessLocations.
  1938. - Support of the Online Certificate Status Protocol (OCSP) for IKEv2.
  1939. This feature requires the HTTP fetching capabilities of the libcurl
  1940. library which must be enabled by setting the --enable-http configure
  1941. option.
  1942. - Refactored core of the IKEv2 message processing code, allowing better
  1943. code reuse and separation.
  1944. - Virtual IP support in IKEv2 using INTERNAL_IP4/6_ADDRESS configuration
  1945. payload. Additionally, the INTERNAL_IP4/6_DNS attribute is interpreted
  1946. by the requestor and installed in a resolv.conf file.
  1947. - The IKEv2 daemon charon installs a route for each IPsec policy to use
  1948. the correct source address even if an application does not explicitly
  1949. specify it.
  1950. - Integrated the EAP framework into charon which loads pluggable EAP library
  1951. modules. The ipsec.conf parameter authby=eap initiates EAP authentication
  1952. on the client side, while the "eap" parameter on the server side defines
  1953. the EAP method to use for client authentication.
  1954. A generic client side EAP-Identity module and an EAP-SIM authentication
  1955. module using a third party card reader implementation are included.
  1956. - Added client side support for cookies.
  1957. - Integrated the fixes done at the IKEv2 interoperability bakeoff, including
  1958. strict payload order, correct INVALID_KE_PAYLOAD rejection and other minor
  1959. fixes to enhance interoperability with other implementations.
  1960. strongswan-4.0.7
  1961. ----------------
  1962. - strongSwan now interoperates with the NCP Secure Entry Client,
  1963. the Shrew Soft VPN Client, and the Cisco VPN client, doing both
  1964. XAUTH and Mode Config.
  1965. - UNITY attributes are now recognized and UNITY_BANNER is set
  1966. to a default string.
  1967. strongswan-4.0.6
  1968. ----------------
  1969. - IKEv1: Support for extended authentication (XAUTH) in combination
  1970. with ISAKMP Main Mode RSA or PSK authentication. Both client and
  1971. server side were implemented. Handling of user credentials can
  1972. be done by a run-time loadable XAUTH module. By default user
  1973. credentials are stored in ipsec.secrets.
  1974. - IKEv2: Support for reauthentication when rekeying
  1975. - IKEv2: Support for transport mode
  1976. - fixed a lot of bugs related to byte order
  1977. - various other bugfixes
  1978. strongswan-4.0.5
  1979. ----------------
  1980. - IKEv1: Implementation of ModeConfig push mode via the new connection
  1981. keyword modeconfig=push allows interoperability with Cisco VPN gateways.
  1982. - IKEv1: The command ipsec statusall now shows "DPD active" for all
  1983. ISAKMP SAs that are under active Dead Peer Detection control.
  1984. - IKEv2: Charon's logging and debugging framework has been completely rewritten.
  1985. Instead of logger, special printf() functions are used to directly
  1986. print objects like hosts (%H) identifications (%D), certificates (%Q),
  1987. etc. The number of debugging levels have been reduced to:
  1988. 0 (audit), 1 (control), 2 (controlmore), 3 (raw), 4 (private)
  1989. The debugging levels can either be specified statically in ipsec.conf as
  1990. config setup
  1991. charondebug="lib 1, cfg 3, net 2"
  1992. or changed at runtime via stroke as
  1993. ipsec stroke loglevel cfg 2
  1994. strongswan-4.0.4
  1995. ----------------
  1996. - Implemented full support for IPv6-in-IPv6 tunnels.
  1997. - Added configuration options for dead peer detection in IKEv2. dpd_action
  1998. types "clear", "hold" and "restart" are supported. The dpd_timeout
  1999. value is not used, as the normal retransmission policy applies to
  2000. detect dead peers. The dpd_delay parameter enables sending of empty
  2001. informational message to detect dead peers in case of inactivity.
  2002. - Added support for preshared keys in IKEv2. PSK keys configured in
  2003. ipsec.secrets are loaded. The authby parameter specifies the authentication
  2004. method to authentificate ourself, the other peer may use PSK or RSA.
  2005. - Changed retransmission policy to respect the keyingtries parameter.
  2006. - Added private key decryption. PEM keys encrypted with AES-128/192/256
  2007. or 3DES are supported.
  2008. - Implemented DES/3DES algorithms in libstrongswan. 3DES can be used to
  2009. encrypt IKE traffic.
  2010. - Implemented SHA-256/384/512 in libstrongswan, allows usage of certificates
  2011. signed with such a hash algorithm.
  2012. - Added initial support for updown scripts. The actions up-host/client and
  2013. down-host/client are executed. The leftfirewall=yes parameter
  2014. uses the default updown script to insert dynamic firewall rules, a custom
  2015. updown script may be specified with the leftupdown parameter.
  2016. strongswan-4.0.3
  2017. ----------------
  2018. - Added support for the auto=route ipsec.conf parameter and the
  2019. ipsec route/unroute commands for IKEv2. This allows to set up IKE_SAs and
  2020. CHILD_SAs dynamically on demand when traffic is detected by the
  2021. kernel.
  2022. - Added support for rekeying IKE_SAs in IKEv2 using the ikelifetime parameter.
  2023. As specified in IKEv2, no reauthentication is done (unlike in IKEv1), only
  2024. new keys are generated using perfect forward secrecy. An optional flag
  2025. which enforces reauthentication will be implemented later.
  2026. - "sha" and "sha1" are now treated as synonyms in the ike= and esp=
  2027. algorithm configuration statements.
  2028. strongswan-4.0.2
  2029. ----------------
  2030. - Full X.509 certificate trust chain verification has been implemented.
  2031. End entity certificates can be exchanged via CERT payloads. The current
  2032. default is leftsendcert=always, since CERTREQ payloads are not supported
  2033. yet. Optional CRLs must be imported locally into /etc/ipsec.d/crls.
  2034. - Added support for leftprotoport/rightprotoport parameters in IKEv2. IKEv2
  2035. would offer more possibilities for traffic selection, but the Linux kernel
  2036. currently does not support it. That's why we stick with these simple
  2037. ipsec.conf rules for now.
  2038. - Added Dead Peer Detection (DPD) which checks liveliness of remote peer if no
  2039. IKE or ESP traffic is received. DPD is currently hardcoded (dpdaction=clear,
  2040. dpddelay=60s).
  2041. - Initial NAT traversal support in IKEv2. Charon includes NAT detection
  2042. notify payloads to detect NAT routers between the peers. It switches
  2043. to port 4500, uses UDP encapsulated ESP packets, handles peer address
  2044. changes gracefully and sends keep alive message periodically.
  2045. - Reimplemented IKE_SA state machine for charon, which allows simultaneous
  2046. rekeying, more shared code, cleaner design, proper retransmission
  2047. and a more extensible code base.
  2048. - The mixed PSK/RSA roadwarrior detection capability introduced by the
  2049. strongswan-2.7.0 release necessitated the pre-parsing of the IKE proposal
  2050. payloads by the responder right before any defined IKE Main Mode state had
  2051. been established. Although any form of bad proposal syntax was being correctly
  2052. detected by the payload parser, the subsequent error handler didn't check
  2053. the state pointer before logging current state information, causing an
  2054. immediate crash of the pluto keying daemon due to a NULL pointer.
  2055. strongswan-4.0.1
  2056. ----------------
  2057. - Added algorithm selection to charon: New default algorithms for
  2058. ike=aes128-sha-modp2048, as both daemons support it. The default
  2059. for IPsec SAs is now esp=aes128-sha,3des-md5. charon handles
  2060. the ike/esp parameter the same way as pluto. As this syntax does
  2061. not allow specification of a pseudo random function, the same
  2062. algorithm as for integrity is used (currently sha/md5). Supported
  2063. algorithms for IKE:
  2064. Encryption: aes128, aes192, aes256
  2065. Integrity/PRF: md5, sha (using hmac)
  2066. DH-Groups: modp768, 1024, 1536, 2048, 4096, 8192
  2067. and for ESP:
  2068. Encryption: aes128, aes192, aes256, 3des, blowfish128,
  2069. blowfish192, blowfish256
  2070. Integrity: md5, sha1
  2071. More IKE encryption algorithms will come after porting libcrypto into
  2072. libstrongswan.
  2073. - initial support for rekeying CHILD_SAs using IKEv2. Currently no
  2074. perfect forward secrecy is used. The rekeying parameters rekey,
  2075. rekeymargin, rekeyfuzz and keylife from ipsec.conf are now supported
  2076. when using IKEv2. WARNING: charon currently is unable to handle
  2077. simultaneous rekeying. To avoid such a situation, use a large
  2078. rekeyfuzz, or even better, set rekey=no on one peer.
  2079. - support for host2host, net2net, host2net (roadwarrior) tunnels
  2080. using predefined RSA certificates (see uml scenarios for
  2081. configuration examples).
  2082. - new build environment featuring autotools. Features such
  2083. as HTTP, LDAP and smartcard support may be enabled using
  2084. the ./configure script. Changing install directories
  2085. is possible, too. See ./configure --help for more details.
  2086. - better integration of charon with ipsec starter, which allows
  2087. (almost) transparent operation with both daemons. charon
  2088. handles ipsec commands up, down, status, statusall, listall,
  2089. listcerts and allows proper load, reload and delete of connections
  2090. via ipsec starter.
  2091. strongswan-4.0.0
  2092. ----------------
  2093. - initial support of the IKEv2 protocol. Connections in
  2094. ipsec.conf designated by keyexchange=ikev2 are negotiated
  2095. by the new IKEv2 charon keying daemon whereas those marked
  2096. by keyexchange=ikev1 or the default keyexchange=ike are
  2097. handled thy the IKEv1 pluto keying daemon. Currently only
  2098. a limited subset of functions are available with IKEv2
  2099. (Default AES encryption, authentication based on locally
  2100. imported X.509 certificates, unencrypted private RSA keys
  2101. in PKCS#1 file format, limited functionality of the ipsec
  2102. status command).
  2103. strongswan-2.7.0
  2104. ----------------
  2105. - the dynamic iptables rules from the _updown_x509 template
  2106. for KLIPS and the _updown_policy template for NETKEY have
  2107. been merged into the default _updown script. The existing
  2108. left|rightfirewall keyword causes the automatic insertion
  2109. and deletion of ACCEPT rules for tunneled traffic upon
  2110. the successful setup and teardown of an IPsec SA, respectively.
  2111. left|rightfirwall can be used with KLIPS under any Linux 2.4
  2112. kernel or with NETKEY under a Linux kernel version >= 2.6.16
  2113. in conjunction with iptables >= 1.3.5. For NETKEY under a Linux
  2114. kernel version < 2.6.16 which does not support IPsec policy
  2115. matching yet, please continue to use a copy of the _updown_espmark
  2116. template loaded via the left|rightupdown keyword.
  2117. - a new left|righthostaccess keyword has been introduced which
  2118. can be used in conjunction with left|rightfirewall and the
  2119. default _updown script. By default leftfirewall=yes inserts
  2120. a bi-directional iptables FORWARD rule for a local client network
  2121. with a netmask different from 255.255.255.255 (single host).
  2122. This does not allow to access the VPN gateway host via its
  2123. internal network interface which is part of the client subnet
  2124. because an iptables INPUT and OUTPUT rule would be required.
  2125. lefthostaccess=yes will cause this additional ACCEPT rules to
  2126. be inserted.
  2127. - mixed PSK|RSA roadwarriors are now supported. The ISAKMP proposal
  2128. payload is preparsed in order to find out whether the roadwarrior
  2129. requests PSK or RSA so that a matching connection candidate can
  2130. be found.
  2131. strongswan-2.6.4
  2132. ----------------
  2133. - the new _updown_policy template allows ipsec policy based
  2134. iptables firewall rules. Required are iptables version
  2135. >= 1.3.5 and linux kernel >= 2.6.16. This script obsoletes
  2136. the _updown_espmark template, so that no INPUT mangle rules
  2137. are required any more.
  2138. - added support of DPD restart mode
  2139. - ipsec starter now allows the use of wildcards in include
  2140. statements as e.g. in "include /etc/my_ipsec/*.conf".
  2141. Patch courtesy of Matthias Haas.
  2142. - the Netscape OID 'employeeNumber' is now recognized and can be
  2143. used as a Relative Distinguished Name in certificates.
  2144. strongswan-2.6.3
  2145. ----------------
  2146. - /etc/init.d/ipsec or /etc/rc.d/ipsec is now a copy of the ipsec
  2147. command and not of ipsec setup any more.
  2148. - ipsec starter now supports AH authentication in conjunction with
  2149. ESP encryption. AH authentication is configured in ipsec.conf
  2150. via the auth=ah parameter.
  2151. - The command ipsec scencrypt|scdecrypt <args> is now an alias for
  2152. ipsec whack --scencrypt|scdecrypt <args>.
  2153. - get_sa_info() now determines for the native netkey IPsec stack
  2154. the exact time of the last use of an active eroute. This information
  2155. is used by the Dead Peer Detection algorithm and is also displayed by
  2156. the ipsec status command.
  2157. strongswan-2.6.2
  2158. ----------------
  2159. - running under the native Linux 2.6 IPsec stack, the function
  2160. get_sa_info() is called by ipsec auto --status to display the current
  2161. number of transmitted bytes per IPsec SA.
  2162. - get_sa_info() is also used by the Dead Peer Detection process to detect
  2163. recent ESP activity. If ESP traffic was received from the peer within
  2164. the last dpd_delay interval then no R_Y_THERE notification must be sent.
  2165. - strongSwan now supports the Relative Distinguished Name "unstructuredName"
  2166. in ID_DER_ASN1_DN identities. The following notations are possible:
  2167. rightid="unstructuredName=John Doe"
  2168. rightid="UN=John Doe"
  2169. - fixed a long-standing bug which caused PSK-based roadwarrior connections
  2170. to segfault in the function id.c:same_id() called by keys.c:get_secret()
  2171. if an FQDN, USER_FQDN, or Key ID was defined, as in the following example.
  2172. conn rw
  2173. right=%any
  2174. rightid=@foo.bar
  2175. authby=secret
  2176. - the ipsec command now supports most ipsec auto commands (e.g. ipsec listall).
  2177. - ipsec starter didn't set host_addr and client.addr ports in whack msg.
  2178. - in order to guarantee backwards-compatibility with the script-based
  2179. auto function (e.g. auto --replace), the ipsec starter scripts stores
  2180. the defaultroute information in the temporary file /var/run/ipsec.info.
  2181. - The compile-time option USE_XAUTH_VID enables the sending of the XAUTH
  2182. Vendor ID which is expected by Cisco PIX 7 boxes that act as IKE Mode Config
  2183. servers.
  2184. - the ipsec starter now also recognizes the parameters authby=never and
  2185. type=passthrough|pass|drop|reject.
  2186. strongswan-2.6.1
  2187. ----------------
  2188. - ipsec starter now supports the also parameter which allows
  2189. a modular structure of the connection definitions. Thus
  2190. "ipsec start" is now ready to replace "ipsec setup".
  2191. strongswan-2.6.0
  2192. ----------------
  2193. - Mathieu Lafon's popular ipsec starter tool has been added to the
  2194. strongSwan distribution. Many thanks go to Stephan Scholz from astaro
  2195. for his integration work. ipsec starter is a C program which is going
  2196. to replace the various shell and awk starter scripts (setup, _plutoload,
  2197. _plutostart, _realsetup, _startklips, _confread, and auto). Since
  2198. ipsec.conf is now parsed only once, the starting of multiple tunnels is
  2199. accelerated tremedously.
  2200. - Added support of %defaultroute to the ipsec starter. If the IP address
  2201. changes, a HUP signal to the ipsec starter will automatically
  2202. reload pluto's connections.
  2203. - moved most compile time configurations from pluto/Makefile to
  2204. Makefile.inc by defining the options USE_LIBCURL, USE_LDAP,
  2205. USE_SMARTCARD, and USE_NAT_TRAVERSAL_TRANSPORT_MODE.
  2206. - removed the ipsec verify and ipsec newhostkey commands
  2207. - fixed some 64-bit issues in formatted print statements
  2208. - The scepclient functionality implementing the Simple Certificate
  2209. Enrollment Protocol (SCEP) is nearly complete but hasn't been
  2210. documented yet.
  2211. strongswan-2.5.7
  2212. ----------------
  2213. - CA certificates are now automatically loaded from a smartcard
  2214. or USB crypto token and appear in the ipsec auto --listcacerts
  2215. listing.
  2216. strongswan-2.5.6
  2217. ----------------
  2218. - when using "ipsec whack --scencrypt <data>" with a PKCS#11
  2219. library that does not support the C_Encrypt() Cryptoki
  2220. function (e.g. OpenSC), the RSA encryption is done in
  2221. software using the public key fetched from the smartcard.
  2222. - The scepclient function now allows to define the
  2223. validity of a self-signed certificate using the --days,
  2224. --startdate, and --enddate options. The default validity
  2225. has been changed from one year to five years.
  2226. strongswan-2.5.5
  2227. ----------------
  2228. - the config setup parameter pkcs11proxy=yes opens pluto's PKCS#11
  2229. interface to other applications for RSA encryption and decryption
  2230. via the whack interface. Notation:
  2231. ipsec whack --scencrypt <data>
  2232. [--inbase 16|hex|64|base64|256|text|ascii]
  2233. [--outbase 16|hex|64|base64|256|text|ascii]
  2234. [--keyid <keyid>]
  2235. ipsec whack --scdecrypt <data>
  2236. [--inbase 16|hex|64|base64|256|text|ascii]
  2237. [--outbase 16|hex|64|base64|256|text|ascii]
  2238. [--keyid <keyid>]
  2239. The default setting for inbase and outbase is hex.
  2240. The new proxy interface can be used for securing symmetric
  2241. encryption keys required by the cryptoloop or dm-crypt
  2242. disk encryption schemes, especially in the case when
  2243. pkcs11keepstate=yes causes pluto to lock the pkcs11 slot
  2244. permanently.
  2245. - if the file /etc/ipsec.secrets is lacking during the startup of
  2246. pluto then the root-readable file /etc/ipsec.d/private/myKey.der
  2247. containing a 2048 bit RSA private key and a matching self-signed
  2248. certificate stored in the file /etc/ipsec.d/certs/selfCert.der
  2249. is automatically generated by calling the function
  2250. ipsec scepclient --out pkcs1 --out cert-self
  2251. scepclient was written by Jan Hutter and Martin Willi, students
  2252. at the University of Applied Sciences in Rapperswil, Switzerland.
  2253. strongswan-2.5.4
  2254. ----------------
  2255. - the current extension of the PKCS#7 framework introduced
  2256. a parsing error in PKCS#7 wrapped X.509 certificates that are
  2257. e.g. transmitted by Windows XP when multi-level CAs are used.
  2258. the parsing syntax has been fixed.
  2259. - added a patch by Gerald Richter which tolerates multiple occurrences
  2260. of the ipsec0 interface when using KLIPS.
  2261. strongswan-2.5.3
  2262. ----------------
  2263. - with gawk-3.1.4 the word "default2 has become a protected
  2264. keyword for use in switch statements and cannot be used any
  2265. more in the strongSwan scripts. This problem has been
  2266. solved by renaming "default" to "defaults" and "setdefault"
  2267. in the scripts _confread and auto, respectively.
  2268. - introduced the parameter leftsendcert with the values
  2269. always|yes (the default, always send a cert)
  2270. ifasked (send the cert only upon a cert request)
  2271. never|no (never send a cert, used for raw RSA keys and
  2272. self-signed certs)
  2273. - fixed the initialization of the ESP key length to a default of
  2274. 128 bits in the case that the peer does not send a key length
  2275. attribute for AES encryption.
  2276. - applied Herbert Xu's uniqueIDs patch
  2277. - applied Herbert Xu's CLOEXEC patches
  2278. strongswan-2.5.2
  2279. ----------------
  2280. - CRLs can now be cached also in the case when the issuer's
  2281. certificate does not contain a subjectKeyIdentifier field.
  2282. In that case the subjectKeyIdentifier is computed by pluto as the
  2283. 160 bit SHA-1 hash of the issuer's public key in compliance
  2284. with section 4.2.1.2 of RFC 3280.
  2285. - Fixed a bug introduced by strongswan-2.5.1 which eliminated
  2286. not only multiple Quick Modes of a given connection but also
  2287. multiple connections between two security gateways.
  2288. strongswan-2.5.1
  2289. ----------------
  2290. - Under the native IPsec of the Linux 2.6 kernel, a %trap eroute
  2291. installed either by setting auto=route in ipsec.conf or by
  2292. a connection put into hold, generates an XFRM_AQUIRE event
  2293. for each packet that wants to use the not-yet existing
  2294. tunnel. Up to now each XFRM_AQUIRE event led to an entry in
  2295. the Quick Mode queue, causing multiple IPsec SA to be
  2296. established in rapid succession. Starting with strongswan-2.5.1
  2297. only a single IPsec SA is established per host-pair connection.
  2298. - Right after loading the PKCS#11 module, all smartcard slots are
  2299. searched for certificates. The result can be viewed using
  2300. the command
  2301. ipsec auto --listcards
  2302. The certificate objects found in the slots are numbered
  2303. starting with #1, #2, etc. This position number can be used to address
  2304. certificates (leftcert=%smartcard) and keys (: PIN %smartcard)
  2305. in ipsec.conf and ipsec.secrets, respectively:
  2306. %smartcard (selects object #1)
  2307. %smartcard#1 (selects object #1)
  2308. %smartcard#3 (selects object #3)
  2309. As an alternative the existing retrieval scheme can be used:
  2310. %smartcard:45 (selects object with id=45)
  2311. %smartcard0 (selects first object in slot 0)
  2312. %smartcard4:45 (selects object in slot 4 with id=45)
  2313. - Depending on the settings of CKA_SIGN and CKA_DECRYPT
  2314. private key flags either C_Sign() or C_Decrypt() is used
  2315. to generate a signature.
  2316. - The output buffer length parameter siglen in C_Sign()
  2317. is now initialized to the actual size of the output
  2318. buffer prior to the function call. This fixes the
  2319. CKR_BUFFER_TOO_SMALL error that could occur when using
  2320. the OpenSC PKCS#11 module.
  2321. - Changed the initialization of the PKCS#11 CK_MECHANISM in
  2322. C_SignInit() to mech = { CKM_RSA_PKCS, NULL_PTR, 0 }.
  2323. - Refactored the RSA public/private key code and transferred it
  2324. from keys.c to the new pkcs1.c file as a preparatory step
  2325. towards the release of the SCEP client.
  2326. strongswan-2.5.0
  2327. ----------------
  2328. - The loading of a PKCS#11 smartcard library module during
  2329. runtime does not require OpenSC library functions any more
  2330. because the corresponding code has been integrated into
  2331. smartcard.c. Also the RSAREF pkcs11 header files have been
  2332. included in a newly created pluto/rsaref directory so that
  2333. no external include path has to be defined any longer.
  2334. - A long-awaited feature has been implemented at last:
  2335. The local caching of CRLs fetched via HTTP or LDAP, activated
  2336. by the parameter cachecrls=yes in the config setup section
  2337. of ipsec.conf. The dynamically fetched CRLs are stored under
  2338. a unique file name containing the issuer's subjectKeyID
  2339. in /etc/ipsec.d/crls.
  2340. - Applied a one-line patch courtesy of Michael Richardson
  2341. from the Openswan project which fixes the kernel-oops
  2342. in KLIPS when an snmp daemon is running on the same box.
  2343. strongswan-2.4.4
  2344. ----------------
  2345. - Eliminated null length CRL distribution point strings.
  2346. - Fixed a trust path evaluation bug introduced with 2.4.3
  2347. strongswan-2.4.3
  2348. ----------------
  2349. - Improved the joint OCSP / CRL revocation policy.
  2350. OCSP responses have precedence over CRL entries.
  2351. - Introduced support of CRLv2 reason codes.
  2352. - Fixed a bug with key-pad equipped readers which caused
  2353. pluto to prompt for the pin via the console when the first
  2354. occasion to enter the pin via the key-pad was missed.
  2355. - When pluto is built with LDAP_V3 enabled, the library
  2356. liblber required by newer versions of openldap is now
  2357. included.
  2358. strongswan-2.4.2
  2359. ----------------
  2360. - Added the _updown_espmark template which requires all
  2361. incoming ESP traffic to be marked with a default mark
  2362. value of 50.
  2363. - Introduced the pkcs11keepstate parameter in the config setup
  2364. section of ipsec.conf. With pkcs11keepstate=yes the PKCS#11
  2365. session and login states are kept as long as possible during
  2366. the lifetime of pluto. This means that a PIN entry via a key
  2367. pad has to be done only once.
  2368. - Introduced the pkcs11module parameter in the config setup
  2369. section of ipsec.conf which specifies the PKCS#11 module
  2370. to be used with smart cards. Example:
  2371. pkcs11module=/usr/lib/pkcs11/opensc-pkcs11.lo
  2372. - Added support of smartcard readers equipped with a PIN pad.
  2373. - Added patch by Jay Pfeifer which detects when netkey
  2374. modules have been statically built into the Linux 2.6 kernel.
  2375. - Added two patches by Herbert Xu. The first uses ip xfrm
  2376. instead of setkey to flush the IPsec policy database. The
  2377. second sets the optional flag in inbound IPComp SAs only.
  2378. - Applied Ulrich Weber's patch which fixes an interoperability
  2379. problem between native IPsec and KLIPS systems caused by
  2380. setting the replay window to 32 instead of 0 for ipcomp.
  2381. strongswan-2.4.1
  2382. ----------------
  2383. - Fixed a bug which caused an unwanted Mode Config request
  2384. to be initiated in the case where "right" was used to denote
  2385. the local side in ipsec.conf and "left" the remote side,
  2386. contrary to the recommendation that "right" be remote and
  2387. "left" be"local".
  2388. strongswan-2.4.0a
  2389. -----------------
  2390. - updated Vendor ID to strongSwan-2.4.0
  2391. - updated copyright statement to include David Buechi and
  2392. Michael Meier
  2393. strongswan-2.4.0
  2394. ----------------
  2395. - strongSwan now communicates with attached smartcards and
  2396. USB crypto tokens via the standardized PKCS #11 interface.
  2397. By default the OpenSC library from www.opensc.org is used
  2398. but any other PKCS#11 library could be dynamically linked.
  2399. strongSwan's PKCS#11 API was implemented by David Buechi
  2400. and Michael Meier, both graduates of the Zurich University
  2401. of Applied Sciences in Winterthur, Switzerland.
  2402. - When a %trap eroute is triggered by an outgoing IP packet
  2403. then the native IPsec stack of the Linux 2.6 kernel [often/
  2404. always?] returns an XFRM_ACQUIRE message with an undefined
  2405. protocol family field and the connection setup fails.
  2406. As a workaround IPv4 (AF_INET) is now assumed.
  2407. - the results of the UML test scenarios are now enhanced
  2408. with block diagrams of the virtual network topology used
  2409. in a particular test.
  2410. strongswan-2.3.2
  2411. ----------------
  2412. - fixed IV used to decrypt informational messages.
  2413. This bug was introduced with Mode Config functionality.
  2414. - fixed NCP Vendor ID.
  2415. - undid one of Ulrich Weber's maximum udp size patches
  2416. because it caused a segmentation fault with NAT-ed
  2417. Delete SA messages.
  2418. - added UML scenarios wildcards and attr-cert which
  2419. demonstrate the implementation of IPsec policies based
  2420. on wildcard parameters contained in Distinguished Names and
  2421. on X.509 attribute certificates, respectively.
  2422. strongswan-2.3.1
  2423. ----------------
  2424. - Added basic Mode Config functionality
  2425. - Added Mathieu Lafon's patch which upgrades the status of
  2426. the NAT-Traversal implementation to RFC 3947.
  2427. - The _startklips script now also loads the xfrm4_tunnel
  2428. module.
  2429. - Added Ulrich Weber's netlink replay window size and
  2430. maximum udp size patches.
  2431. - UML testing now uses the Linux 2.6.10 UML kernel by default.
  2432. strongswan-2.3.0
  2433. ----------------
  2434. - Eric Marchionni and Patrik Rayo, both recent graduates from
  2435. the Zuercher Hochschule Winterthur in Switzerland, created a
  2436. User-Mode-Linux test setup for strongSwan. For more details
  2437. please read the INSTALL and README documents in the testing
  2438. subdirectory.
  2439. - Full support of group attributes based on X.509 attribute
  2440. certificates. Attribute certificates can be generated
  2441. using the openac facility. For more details see
  2442. man ipsec_openac.
  2443. The group attributes can be used in connection definitions
  2444. in order to give IPsec access to specific user groups.
  2445. This is done with the new parameter left|rightgroups as in
  2446. rightgroups="Research, Sales"
  2447. giving access to users possessing the group attributes
  2448. Research or Sales, only.
  2449. - In Quick Mode clients with subnet mask /32 are now
  2450. coded as IP_V4_ADDRESS or IP_V6_ADDRESS. This should
  2451. fix rekeying problems with the SafeNet/SoftRemote and NCP
  2452. Secure Entry Clients.
  2453. - Changed the defaults of the ikelifetime and keylife parameters
  2454. to 3h and 1h, respectively. The maximum allowable values are
  2455. now both set to 24 h.
  2456. - Suppressed notification wars between two IPsec peers that
  2457. could e.g. be triggered by incorrect ISAKMP encryption.
  2458. - Public RSA keys can now have identical IDs if either the
  2459. issuing CA or the serial number is different. The serial
  2460. number of a certificate is now shown by the command
  2461. ipsec auto --listpubkeys
  2462. strongswan-2.2.2
  2463. ----------------
  2464. - Added Tuomo Soini's sourceip feature which allows a strongSwan
  2465. roadwarrior to use a fixed Virtual IP (see README section 2.6)
  2466. and reduces the well-known four tunnel case on VPN gateways to
  2467. a single tunnel definition (see README section 2.4).
  2468. - Fixed a bug occurring with NAT-Traversal enabled when the responder
  2469. suddenly turns initiator and the initiator cannot find a matching
  2470. connection because of the floated IKE port 4500.
  2471. - Removed misleading ipsec verify command from barf.
  2472. - Running under the native IP stack, ipsec --version now shows
  2473. the Linux kernel version (courtesy to the Openswan project).
  2474. strongswan-2.2.1
  2475. ----------------
  2476. - Introduced the ipsec auto --listalgs monitoring command which lists
  2477. all currently registered IKE and ESP algorithms.
  2478. - Fixed a bug in the ESP algorithm selection occurring when the strict flag
  2479. is set and the first proposed transform does not match.
  2480. - Fixed another deadlock in the use of the lock_certs_and_keys() mutex,
  2481. occurring when a smartcard is present.
  2482. - Prevented that a superseded Phase1 state can trigger a DPD_TIMEOUT event.
  2483. - Fixed the printing of the notification names (null)
  2484. - Applied another of Herbert Xu's Netlink patches.
  2485. strongswan-2.2.0
  2486. ----------------
  2487. - Support of Dead Peer Detection. The connection parameter
  2488. dpdaction=clear|hold
  2489. activates DPD for the given connection.
  2490. - The default Opportunistic Encryption (OE) policy groups are not
  2491. automatically included anymore. Those wishing to activate OE can include
  2492. the policy group with the following statement in ipsec.conf:
  2493. include /etc/ipsec.d/examples/oe.conf
  2494. The default for [right|left]rsasigkey is now set to %cert.
  2495. - strongSwan now has a Vendor ID of its own which can be activated
  2496. using the compile option VENDORID
  2497. - Applied Herbert Xu's patch which sets the compression algorithm correctly.
  2498. - Applied Herbert Xu's patch fixing an ESPINUDP problem
  2499. - Applied Herbert Xu's patch setting source/destination port numbers.
  2500. - Reapplied one of Herbert Xu's NAT-Traversal patches which got
  2501. lost during the migration from SuperFreeS/WAN.
  2502. - Fixed a deadlock in the use of the lock_certs_and_keys() mutex.
  2503. - Fixed the unsharing of alg parameters when instantiating group
  2504. connection.
  2505. strongswan-2.1.5
  2506. ----------------
  2507. - Thomas Walpuski made me aware of a potential DoS attack via
  2508. a PKCS#7-wrapped certificate bundle which could overwrite valid CA
  2509. certificates in Pluto's authority certificate store. This vulnerability
  2510. was fixed by establishing trust in CA candidate certificates up to a
  2511. trusted root CA prior to insertion into Pluto's chained list.
  2512. - replaced the --assign option by the -v option in the auto awk script
  2513. in order to make it run with mawk under debian/woody.
  2514. strongswan-2.1.4
  2515. ----------------
  2516. - Split of the status information between ipsec auto --status (concise)
  2517. and ipsec auto --statusall (verbose). Both commands can be used with
  2518. an optional connection selector:
  2519. ipsec auto --status[all] <connection_name>
  2520. - Added the description of X.509 related features to the ipsec_auto(8)
  2521. man page.
  2522. - Hardened the ASN.1 parser in debug mode, especially the printing
  2523. of malformed distinguished names.
  2524. - The size of an RSA public key received in a certificate is now restricted to
  2525. 512 bits <= modulus length <= 8192 bits.
  2526. - Fixed the debug mode enumeration.
  2527. strongswan-2.1.3
  2528. ----------------
  2529. - Fixed another PKCS#7 vulnerability which could lead to an
  2530. endless loop while following the X.509 trust chain.
  2531. strongswan-2.1.2
  2532. ----------------
  2533. - Fixed the PKCS#7 vulnerability discovered by Thomas Walpuski
  2534. that accepted end certificates having identical issuer and subject
  2535. distinguished names in a multi-tier X.509 trust chain.
  2536. strongswan-2.1.1
  2537. ----------------
  2538. - Removed all remaining references to ipsec_netlink.h in KLIPS.
  2539. strongswan-2.1.0
  2540. ----------------
  2541. - The new "ca" section allows to define the following parameters:
  2542. ca kool
  2543. cacert=koolCA.pem # cacert of kool CA
  2544. ocspuri=http://ocsp.kool.net:8001 # ocsp server
  2545. ldapserver=ldap.kool.net # default ldap server
  2546. crluri=http://www.kool.net/kool.crl # crl distribution point
  2547. crluri2="ldap:///O=Kool, C= .." # crl distribution point #2
  2548. auto=add # add, ignore
  2549. The ca definitions can be monitored via the command
  2550. ipsec auto --listcainfos
  2551. - Fixed cosmetic corruption of /proc filesystem by integrating
  2552. D. Hugh Redelmeier's freeswan-2.06 kernel fixes.
  2553. strongswan-2.0.2
  2554. ----------------
  2555. - Added support for the 818043 NAT-Traversal update of Microsoft's
  2556. Windows 2000/XP IPsec client which sends an ID_FQDN during Quick Mode.
  2557. - A symbolic link to libcrypto is now added in the kernel sources
  2558. during kernel compilation
  2559. - Fixed a couple of 64 bit issues (mostly casts to int).
  2560. Thanks to Ken Bantoft who checked my sources on a 64 bit platform.
  2561. - Replaced s[n]printf() statements in the kernel by ipsec_snprintf().
  2562. Credits go to D. Hugh Redelmeier, Michael Richardson, and Sam Sgro
  2563. of the FreeS/WAN team who solved this problem with the 2.4.25 kernel.
  2564. strongswan-2.0.1
  2565. ----------------
  2566. - an empty ASN.1 SEQUENCE OF or SET OF object (e.g. a subjectAltName
  2567. certificate extension which contains no generalName item) can cause
  2568. a pluto crash. This bug has been fixed. Additionally the ASN.1 parser has
  2569. been hardened to make it more robust against malformed ASN.1 objects.
  2570. - applied Herbert Xu's NAT-T patches which fixes NAT-T under the native
  2571. Linux 2.6 IPsec stack.
  2572. strongswan-2.0.0
  2573. ----------------
  2574. - based on freeswan-2.04, x509-1.5.3, nat-0.6c, alg-0.8.1rc12