sni.yaml¶
Description¶
This file is used to configure aspects of TLS connection handling for both inbound and outbound
connections. The configuration is driven by the SNI values provided by the inbound connection. The
file consists of a set of configuration items, each identified by an SNI value (fqdn
).
When an inbound TLS connection is made, the SNI value from the TLS negotiation is matched against
the items specified by this file and if there is a match, the values specified in that item override
the defaults. This is done during the inbound connection processing; some outbound properties
can be overridden again later, such as via remap.config
or plugins.
By default this is named sni.yaml
. The filename can be changed by setting
proxy.config.ssl.servername.filename
. This file is loaded on start up and by
traffic_ctl config reload
if the file has been modified since process start.
The configuration file is YAML-based. After parsing the configuration, a list of tables will be the result.
Each table is a set of key / value pairs that create a configuration item. This configuration file accepts
wildcard entries. To apply an SNI based setting on all the server names with a common upper level domain name,
the user needs to enter the fqdn in the configuration with a *.
followed by the common domain name. (*.yahoo.com
for example).
Key |
Meaning |
---|---|
fqdn |
Fully Qualified Domain Name. This item is used if the SNI value matches this. |
ip_allow |
Specify a list of client IP address, subnets, or ranges what are allowed to complete the connection. This list is comma separated. IPv4 and IPv6 addresses can be specified. Here is an example list: 192.168.1.0/24,192.168.10.1-4. This would allow connections from clients in the 19.168.1.0 network or in the range from 192.168.10.1 to 192.168.1.4. |
verify_server_policy |
One of the values By default this is |
verify_server_properties |
One of the values By default this is |
verify_client |
One of the values By default this is |
verify_client_ca_certs |
Specifies an alternate set of certificate authority certs to use to verify the
client cert. The value must be either a file path, or a nested set of key /
value pairs. If the value is a file path, it must specify a file containing the
CA certs. Otherwise, there should be up to two nested pairs. The possible keys
are |
host_sni_policy |
One of the values If not specified, the value of |
valid_tls_versions_in |
This specifies the list of TLS protocols that will be offered to user agents during
the TLS negotiation. This replaces the global settings in
|
client_cert |
The file containing the client certificate to use for the outbound connection. If this is relative, it is relative to the path in
|
client_key |
The file containing the client private key that corresponds to the certificate for the outbound connection. If this is relative, it is relative to the path in
|
http2 |
Indicates whether the H2 protocol should be added to or removed from the
protocol negotiation list. The valid values are |
disable_h2 |
Deprecated for the more general h2 setting. Setting disable_h2
to |
tunnel_route |
Destination as an FQDN and port, separated by a colon This will forward all traffic to the specified destination without first terminating the incoming TLS connection. |
forward_route |
Destination as an FQDN and port, separated by a colon This is similar to tunnel_route, but it terminates the TLS connection and forwards the decrypted traffic. Traffic Server will not interpret the decrypted data, so the contents do not need to be HTTP. |
partial_blind_route |
Destination as an FQDN and port, separated by a colon This is similar to forward_route in that Traffic Server terminates the incoming TLS connection. In addition partial_blind_route creates a new TLS connection to the specified origin. It does not interpret the decrypted data before passing it to the origin TLS connection, so the contents do not need to be HTTP. |
tunnel_alpn |
List of ALPN Protocol Ids for Partial Blind Tunnel. ATS negotiates application protocol with the client on behalf of the origin server.
This only works with |
Client verification, via verify_client
, corresponds to setting
proxy.config.ssl.client.certification_level
for this connection as noted below.
NONE
–0
Do not request a client certificate, ignore it if one is provided.
MODERATE
-1
Request a client certificate and do verification if one is provided. The connection is denied if the verification of the client provided certificate fails.
STRICT
-2
Request a client certificate and require one to be provided and verified. If the verification fails the failure is logged to
diags.log
and the connection is denied.
Upstream (server) verification, via verify_server_policy
and verify_server_properties
, is similar to client verification
except there is always an upstream certificate. This is equivalent to setting
proxy.config.ssl.client.verify.server.policy
and proxy.config.ssl.client.verify.server.properties
for this connection.
verify_server_policy
specifies how Traffic Server will enforce the server certificate verification.
DISABLED
Do not verify the upstream server certificate.
PERMISSIVE
Do verification of the upstream certificate but do not enforce. If the verification fails the failure is logged in
diags.log
but the connection is allowed.ENFORCED
Do verification of the upstream certificate. If verification fails, the failure is logged in
diags.log
and the connection is denied.
In addition verify_server_properties
specifies what Traffic Server will check when performing the verification.
NONE
Do not check anything in the standard Traffic Server verification routine. Rely entirely on the
TS_SSL_VERIFY_SERVER_HOOK
for evaluating the origin’s certificate.SIGNATURE
Check the signature of the origin certificate.
NAME
Verify that the SNI is in the origin certificate.
ALL
Verify both the signature and the SNI in the origin certificate.
If tunnel_route
is specified, none of the certificate verification will be done because the TLS
negotiation will be tunneled to the upstream target, making those values irrelevant for that
configuration item. This option is explained in more detail in SNI Routing.
Examples¶
Disable HTTP/2 for no-http2.example.com
.
sni:
- fqdn: no-http2.example.com
http2: off
Require client certificate verification for foo.com
and any server name ending with .yahoo.com
. Therefore, client
request for a server name ending with yahoo.com (e.g., def.yahoo.com, abc.yahoo.com etc.) will cause Traffic Server require and verify
the client certificate.
For foo.com
, if the user agent sets the host header to foo.com but the SNI to some other value, Traffic Server will warn about the
mismatch but continue to process the request. Mismatches for the other domains will cause Traffic Server to warn and return 403.
Traffic Server will allow a client certificate to be provided for example.com
and if it is, Traffic Server will require the
certificate to be valid.
sni:
- fqdn: example.com
verify_client: MODERATE
- fqdn: 'foo.com'
verify_client: STRICT
host_sni_policy: PERMISSIVE
- fqdn: '*.yahoo.com'
verify_client: STRICT
Disable outbound server certificate verification for trusted.example.com
and require a valid
client certificate.
sni:
- fqdn: trusted.example.com
verify_server_policy: DISABLED
verify_client: STRICT
Use FQDN captured group to match in tunnel_route
.
sni:
- fqdn: '*.foo.com'
tunnel_route: '$1.myfoo'
- fqdn: '*.bar.*.com'
tunnel_route: '$2.some.$1.yahoo'
FQDN some.foo.com
will match and the captured string will be replaced in the tunnel_route
which will end up being
some.myfoo
.
Second part is using multiple groups, having bob.bar.example.com
as FQDN, tunnel_route
will end up being
bar.some.bob.yahoo
.