xref: /freebsd/share/man/man4/ktls.4 (revision f61e92ca5a23450bc28169bbdd71d7674df98c19)
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34.Dd February 8, 2021
35.Dt KTLS 4
36.Os
37.Sh NAME
38.Nm ktls
39.Nd kernel Transport Layer Security
40.Sh SYNOPSIS
41.Cd options KERN_TLS
42.Sh DESCRIPTION
43The
44.Nm
45facility allows the kernel to perform Transport Layer Security (TLS)
46framing on TCP sockets.
47With
48.Nm ,
49the initial handshake for a socket using TLS is performed in userland.
50Once the session keys are negotiated,
51they are provided to the kernel via the
52.Dv TCP_TXTLS_ENABLE
53and
54.Dv TCP_RXTLS_ENABLE
55socket options.
56Both socket options accept a
57.Vt struct tls_so_enable
58structure as their argument.
59The members of this structure describe the cipher suite used for the
60TLS session and provide the session keys used for the respective
61direction.
62.Pp
63.Nm
64only permits the session keys to be set once in each direction.
65As a result,
66applications must disable rekeying when using
67.Nm .
68.Ss Modes
69.Nm
70can operate in different modes.
71A given socket may use different modes for transmit and receive,
72or a socket may only offload a single direction.
73The available modes are:
74.Bl -tag -width "Dv TCP_TLS_MODE_IFNET"
75.It Dv TCP_TLS_MODE_NONE
76.Nm
77is not enabled.
78.It Dv TCP_TLS_MODE_SW
79TLS records are encrypted or decrypted in the kernel in the socket
80layer.
81Typically the encryption or decryption is performed in software,
82but it may also be performed by co-processors via
83.Xr crypto 9 .
84.It Dv TCP_TLS_MODE_IFNET
85TLS records are encrypted or decrypted by the network interface card (NIC).
86In this mode, the network stack does not work with encrypted data.
87Instead, the NIC encrypts TLS records as they are being transmitted,
88or decrypts received TLS records before providing them to the host.
89.Pp
90Network interfaces which support this feature will advertise the
91.Dv TXTLS4
92(for IPv4)
93and/or
94.Dv TXTLS6
95(for IPv6)
96capabilities as reported by
97.Xr ifconfig 8 .
98These capabilities can also be controlled by
99.Xr ifconfig 8 .
100.Pp
101If a network interface supports rate limiting
102(also known as packet pacing) for TLS offload,
103the interface will advertise the
104.Dv TXTLS_RTLMT
105capability.
106.It Dv TCP_TLS_MODE_TOE
107TLS records are encrypted by the NIC using a TCP offload engine (TOE).
108This is similar to
109.Dv TCP_TLS_MODE_IFNET
110in that the network stack does not work with encrypted data.
111However, this mode works in tandem with a TOE to handle interactions
112between TCP and TLS.
113.El
114.Ss Transmit
115Once TLS transmit is enabled by a successful set of the
116.Dv TCP_TXTLS_ENABLE
117socket option,
118all data written on the socket is stored in TLS records and encrypted.
119Most data is transmitted in application layer TLS records,
120and the kernel chooses how to partition data among TLS records.
121Individual TLS records with a fixed length and record type can be sent
122by
123.Xr sendmsg 2
124with the TLS record type set in a
125.Dv TLS_SET_RECORD_TYPE
126control message.
127The payload of this control message is a single byte holding the desired
128TLS record type.
129This can be used to send TLS records with a type other than
130application data (for example, handshake messages) or to send
131application data records with specific contents (for example, empty
132fragments).
133.Pp
134TLS transmit requires the use of unmapped mbufs.
135Unmapped mbufs are not enabled by default, but can be enabled by
136setting the
137.Va kern.ipc.mb_use_ext_pgs
138sysctl node to 1.
139.Pp
140The current TLS transmit mode of a socket can be queried via the
141.Dv TCP_TXTLS_MODE
142socket option.
143A socket using TLS transmit offload can also set the
144.Dv TCP_TXTLS_MODE
145socket option to toggle between
146.Dv TCP_TLS_MODE_SW
147and
148.Dv TCP_TLS_MODE_IFNET .
149.Ss Receive
150Once TLS receive is enabled by a successful set of the
151.Dv TCP_RXTLS_ENABLE
152socket option,
153all data read from the socket is returned as decrypted TLS records.
154Each received TLS record must be read from the socket using
155.Xr recvmsg 2 .
156Each received TLS record will contain a
157.Dv TLS_GET_RECORD
158control message along with the decrypted payload.
159The control message contains a
160.Vt struct tls_get_record
161which includes fields from the TLS record header.
162If an invalid or corrupted TLS record is received,
163.Xr recvmsg 2
164will fail with one of the following errors:
165.Bl -tag -width Er
166.It Bq Er EINVAL
167The version fields in a TLS record's header did not match the version required
168by the
169.Vt struct tls_so_enable
170structure used to enable in-kernel TLS.
171.It Bq Er EMSGSIZE
172A TLS record's length was either too small or too large.
173.It Bq Er EMSGSIZE
174The connection was closed after sending a truncated TLS record.
175.It Bq Er EBADMSG
176The TLS record failed to match the included authentication tag.
177.El
178.Pp
179The current TLS receive mode of a socket can be queried via the
180.Dv TCP_RXTLS_MODE
181socket option.
182At present,
183the mode cannot be changed.
184.Ss Sysctl Nodes
185.Nm
186uses several sysctl nodes under the
187.Va kern.ipc.tls
188node.
189A few of them are described below:
190.Bl -tag -width ".Va kern.ipc.tls.cbc_enable"
191.It Va kern.ipc.tls.enable
192Determines if new kernel TLS sessions can be created.
193.It Va kern.ipc.tls.cbc_enable
194Determines if new kernel TLS sessions with a cipher suite using AES-CBC
195can be created.
196.It Va kern.ipc.tls.sw
197A tree of nodes containing statistics for TLS sessions using
198.Dv TCP_TLS_MODE_SW .
199.It Va kern.ipc.tls.ifnet
200A tree of nodes containing statistics for TLS sessions using
201.Dv TCP_TLS_MODE_IFNET .
202.It Va kern.ipc.tls.toe
203A tree of nodes containing statistics for TLS sessions using
204.Dv TCP_TLS_MODE_TOE .
205.It Va kern.ipc.tls.stats
206A tree of nodes containing various kernel TLS statistics.
207.El
208.Ss Backends
209The base system includes a software backend for the
210.Dv TCP_TLS_MODE_SW
211mode which uses
212.Xr crypto 9
213to encrypt and decrypt TLS records.
214This backend can be enabled by loading the
215.Pa ktls_ocf.ko
216kernel module.
217.Pp
218The
219.Xr cxgbe 4
220and
221.Xr mlx5en 4
222drivers include support for the
223.Dv TCP_TLS_MODE_IFNET
224mode.
225.Pp
226The
227.Xr cxgbe 4
228driver includes support for the
229.Dv TCP_TLS_MODE_TOE
230mode.
231.Ss Supported Libraries
232OpenSSL 3.0 and later include support for
233.Nm .
234The
235.Fa devel/openssl
236port may also be built with support for
237.Nm
238by enabling the
239.Dv KTLS
240option.
241OpenSSL in the base system includes KTLS support when built with
242.Dv WITH_OPENSSL_KTLS .
243.Pp
244Applications using a supported library should generally work with
245.Nm
246without any changes provided they use standard interfaces such as
247.Xr SSL_read 3
248and
249.Xr SSL_write 3 .
250Additional performance may be gained by the use of
251.Xr SSL_sendfile 3 .
252.Sh IMPLEMENTATION NOTES
253.Nm
254assumes the presence of a direct map of physical memory when performing
255software encryption and decryption.
256As a result, it is only supported on architectures with a direct map.
257.Sh SEE ALSO
258.Xr cxgbe 4 ,
259.Xr mlx5en 4 ,
260.Xr tcp 4 ,
261.Xr src.conf 5 ,
262.Xr ifconfig 8 ,
263.Xr sysctl 8 ,
264.Xr crypto 9
265.Sh HISTORY
266Kernel TLS first appeared in
267.Fx 13.0 .
268