s2n is a C99 implementation of the TLS/SSL protocols that is designed to be simple, small, fast, and with security as a priority. It is released and licensed under the Apache License 2.0.
- Fork s2n on GitHub
- Run the following commands on either Ubuntu or Mac OSX.
git clone https://github.com/${YOUR_GITHUB_ACCOUNT_NAME}/s2n.git
cd s2n
# Pick an "env" line from the .travis.yml file and run it, in this case choose the openssl-1.1.0 build
S2N_LIBCRYPTO=openssl-1.1.0 BUILD_S2N=true TESTS=integration GCC6_REQUIRED=true
source .travis/s2n_setup_env.sh
.travis/s2n_install_test_dependencies.sh
.travis/s2n_travis_build.sh
If you have any questions about Submitting PR's, Opening Issues, s2n API usage, or something similar, we have a public chatroom available here to answer your questions: https://gitter.im/awslabs/s2n
Otherwise, if you think you might have found a security impacting issue, please instead follow our Security Notification Process.
The s2n I/O APIs are designed to be intuitive to developers familiar with the widely-used POSIX I/O APIs, and s2n supports blocking, non-blocking, and full-duplex I/O. Additionally there are no locks or mutexes within s2n.
/* Create a server mode connection handle */
struct s2n_connection *conn = s2n_connection_new(S2N_SERVER);
if (conn == NULL) {
... error ...
}
/* Associate a connection with a file descriptor */
if (s2n_connection_set_fd(conn, fd) < 0) {
... error ...
}
/* Negotiate the TLS handshake */
s2n_blocked_status blocked;
if (s2n_negotiate(conn, &blocked) < 0) {
... error ...
}
/* Write data to the connection */
int bytes_written;
bytes_written = s2n_send(conn, "Hello World", sizeof("Hello World"), &blocked);
For details on building the s2n library and how to use s2n in an application you are developing, see the API Reference.
s2n implements SSLv3, TLS1.0, TLS1.1, and TLS1.2. For encryption, s2n supports 128-bit and 256-bit AES, in the CBC and GCM modes, ChaCha20, 3DES, and RC4. For forward secrecy, s2n supports both DHE and ECDHE. s2n also supports the Server Name Indicator (SNI), Application-Layer Protocol Negotiation (ALPN) and the Online Certificate Status Protocol (OCSP) TLS extensions. SSLv3, RC4, 3DES and DHE are each disabled by default for security reasons.
As it can be difficult to keep track of which encryption algorithms and protocols are best to use, s2n features a simple API to use the latest "default" set of preferences. If you prefer to remain on a specific version for backwards compatibility, that is also supported.
/* Use the latest s2n "default" set of ciphersuite and protocol preferences */
s2n_config_set_cipher_preferences(config, "default");
/* Use a specific set of preferences, update when you're ready */
s2n_config_set_cipher_preferences(config, "20150306")
Internally s2n takes a systematic approach to data protection and includes several mechanisms designed to improve safety.
Ignoring tests, blank lines and comments, s2n is about 6,000 lines of code. s2n's code is also structured and written with a focus on reviewability. All s2n code is subject to code review, and we plan to complete security evaluations of s2n on an annual basis.
To date there have been two external code-level reviews of s2n, including one by a commercial security vendor. s2n has also been shared with some trusted members of the broader cryptography, security, and Open Source communities. Any issues discovered are always recorded in the s2n issue tracker.
In addition to code reviews, s2n is subject to regular static analysis, fuzz-testing, and penetration testing. Several penetration tests have occurred, including two by commercial vendors.
s2n includes positive and negative unit tests and end-to-end test cases.
s2n encrypts or erases plaintext data as quickly as possible. For example, decrypted data buffers are erased as they are read by the application.
s2n uses operating system features to protect data from being swapped to disk or appearing in core dumps.
s2n avoids implementing rarely used options and extensions, as well as features with a history of triggering protocol-level vulnerabilities. For example there is no support for session renegotiation or DTLS.
The security of TLS and its associated encryption algorithms depends upon secure random number generation. s2n provides every thread with two separate random number generators. One for "public" randomly generated data that may appear in the clear, and one for "private" data that should remain secret. This approach lessens the risk of potential predictability weaknesses in random number generation algorithms from leaking information across contexts.
s2n has been structured so that different encryption libraries may be used. Today s2n supports OpenSSL, LibreSSL, BoringSSL, and the Apple Common Crypto framework to perform the underlying cryptographic operations.
s2n includes structured support for blinding time-based side-channels that may leak sensitive data. For example, if s2n fails to parse a TLS record or handshake message, s2n will add a randomized delay of between 10 and 30 seconds, granular to nanoseconds, before responding. This raises the complexity of real-world timing side-channel attacks by a factor of at least tens of trillions.
s2n uses simple tables to drive the TLS/SSL state machines, making it difficult for invalid out-of-order states to arise.
s2n is written in C, but makes light use of standard C library functions and wraps all memory handling, string handling, and serialization in systematic boundary-enforcing checks.
If you discover a potential security issue in s2n we ask that you notify AWS Security via our vulnerability reporting page. Please do not create a public github issue.
If you package or distribute s2n, or use s2n as part of a large multi-user service, you may be eligible for pre-notification of future s2n releases. Please contact s2n-pre-notification@amazon.com.
If you are interested in contributing to s2n, please see our development guide.
See our language bindings list for language bindings for s2n that we're aware of.