[EXTERNAL]Re: NullPointer in JceSecurity.getVerificationResult - Affects JDK 11.07, and JDK 12 and later.

John Gray John.Gray at entrustdatacard.com
Wed Jun 10 20:31:27 UTC 2020


Thanks Valerie!

If I understand you correctly, I think you are saying the fix for https://bugs.openjdk.java.net/browse/JDK-8246613  will mean the first SecureRandom in the provider will be used as the default (which will make it equivalent to JDK 11.06 and previous versions).    If that is the case, I agree it should mitigate the issue and would be ok with lowering the priority of 8246383.

Will this new fix be back-ported into 11 LTS versions as well?

Thanks so much for your amazing fast response.   I have been trying to set aside some time to put together a simple sample you can use to verify 8246383 (that doesn't require our full toolkit), but haven't been able to find the time to do that yet.

Cheers,

John Gray



From: Valerie Peng [mailto:valerie.peng at oracle.com]
Sent: Wednesday, June 10, 2020 4:14 PM
To: John Gray <John.Gray at entrustdatacard.com>; security-dev at openjdk.java.net
Cc: Muthu Kannappan <muthu at entrustdatacard.com>; Raj Arora <Raj.Arora at entrustdatacard.com>
Subject: [EXTERNAL]Re: NullPointer in JceSecurity.getVerificationResult - Affects JDK 11.07, and JDK 12 and later.

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Hi John,

As you may have noticed, we are progressing a fix for https://bugs.openjdk.java.net/browse/JDK-8246613 for returning the same default SecureRandom algo for 3rd party providers as in pre-JDK7092821 releases. Thus, the chance of observing JDK-8246613 should be lowered significantly. Given this, I plan to lower the priority of JDK-8246383 and it may not be fixed in JDK 15 as earlier communicated.

If this will be an issue, please let me know.
Thanks,
Valerie
On 6/2/2020 4:37 PM, Valerie Peng wrote:

Thanks for reporting the bug and the detailed analysis.

I have filed https://bugs.openjdk.java.net/browse/JDK-8246383 to keep track of this. Will aim to fix this for 15 and have it backported accordingly.

Is it possible to get hold of an test provider to reproduce and verifying the fix?

Regards,
Valerie
On 6/2/2020 1:18 PM, John Gray wrote:
Hello,

At Entrust Datacard, we produce a Java based toolkit that contains our own Security Provider.   This toolkit and provider  has been around for about 19 years.

In JDK version 11.07 (and I also think Java 12 and beyond), our toolkit reports the following error:
java.lang.RuntimeException: java.security.NoSuchAlgorithmException: Error constructing implementation (algorithm: X9_31usingAES256, provider: Entrust, class: com.entrust.toolkit.security.crypto.random.X9_31usingAES256)
at java.base/java.security.SecureRandom.getDefaultPRNG(SecureRandom.java:281)
at java.base/java.security.SecureRandom.<init>(SecureRandom.java:219)
at java.base/javax.crypto.JceSecurity.<clinit>(JceSecurity.java:80)
... 41 more
Caused by: java.security.NoSuchAlgorithmException: Error constructing implementation (algorithm: X9_31usingAES256, provider: Entrust, class: com.entrust.toolkit.security.crypto.random.X9_31usingAES256)
at java.base/java.security.Provider$Service.newInstance(Provider.java:1825)
at java.base/sun.security.jca.GetInstance.getInstance(GetInstance.java:236)
at java.base/sun.security.jca.GetInstance.getInstance(GetInstance.java:164)
at java.base/java.security.SecureRandom.getInstance(SecureRandom.java:365)
at java.base/java.security.SecureRandom.getDefaultPRNG(SecureRandom.java:273)
... 43 more
Caused by: java.lang.NullPointerException
at java.base/javax.crypto.JceSecurity.getVerificationResult(JceSecurity.java:203)
at java.base/javax.crypto.Cipher.getInstance(Cipher.java:690)
at java.base/javax.crypto.Cipher.getInstance(Cipher.java:625)
at com.entrust.toolkit.security.crypto.random.X9_31usingAES256.initialize(X9_31usingAES256.java:524)
at com.entrust.toolkit.security.crypto.random.X9_31usingAES256.<init>(X9_31usingAES256.java:102)
at java.base/jdk.internal.reflect.NativeConstructorAccessorImpl.newInstance0(Native Method)
at java.base/jdk.internal.reflect.NativeConstructorAccessorImpl.newInstance(NativeConstructorAccessorImpl.java:62)
at java.base/jdk.internal.reflect.DelegatingConstructorAccessorImpl.newInstance(DelegatingConstructorAccessorImpl.java:45)
at java.base/java.lang.reflect.Constructor.newInstance(Constructor.java:490)
at java.base/java.security.Provider.newInstanceUtil(Provider.java:176)
at java.base/java.security.Provider$Service.newInstance(Provider.java:1818)

I investigated this error, and found it was made possible because of the following change in Java 11.07 which unmasked a bug in the JVM that has probably been around for years.
https://bugs.java.com/bugdatabase/view_bug.do?bug_id=JDK-8228613

It is a problem inside the JceSecurity class.  When the class is being loaded, the call to setup a default SecureRandom() instance is invoked.    That seems to invoke the JVM to find the first available SecureRandom() instance.    This error happens when our Entrust provider is in first position.   In previous versions of the JDK it honoured the order of algorithms specified in the providers.   In our Entrust Security provider, we have a number of SecureRandom implementations.   Now because of the above change, it picks a different SecureRandom instance (the X9_31usingAES256).   That should be fine, however the problem is that the SecureRandom() setup calls Cipher.getInstance() and as you can see below, that calls JceSecurity.getVerificationResult() which is static, and uses the verificationResuts Map that has not yet been initialized (becasuse it's declaration is after the SecureRandom setup).    That is why there is a NullPointerException.

public static final Cipher getInstance(String transformation,
                                           Provider provider)
            throws NoSuchAlgorithmException, NoSuchPaddingException
    {
        if ((transformation == null) || transformation.equals("")) {
            throw new NoSuchAlgorithmException("Null or empty transformation");
        }
        if (provider == null) {
            throw new IllegalArgumentException("Missing provider");
        }
        Exception failure = null;
        List<Transform> transforms = getTransforms(transformation);
        boolean providerChecked = false;
        String paddingError = null;
        for (Transform tr : transforms) {
            Service s = provider.getService("Cipher", tr.transform);
            if (s == null) {
                continue;
            }
            if (providerChecked == false) {
                // for compatibility, first do the lookup and then verify
                // the provider. this makes the difference between a NSAE
                // and a SecurityException if the
                // provider does not support the algorithm.
                Exception ve = JceSecurity.getVerificationResult(provider);
                if (ve != null) {
                    String msg = "JCE cannot authenticate the provider "
                        + provider.getName();
                    throw new SecurityException(msg, ve);
                }
                providerChecked = true;
            }

The JceSecurity.getVerificationResult(provider) method is used when initializing the SecureRandom (first highlighted line below) when the classLoader is loading the JceSecurity class itself.

>From the JceSecurity class:

static final SecureRandom RANDOM = new SecureRandom();

    // The defaultPolicy and exemptPolicy will be set up
    // in the static initializer.
    private static CryptoPermissions defaultPolicy = null;
    private static CryptoPermissions exemptPolicy = null;

    // Map<Provider,?> of the providers we already have verified
    // value == PROVIDER_VERIFIED is successfully verified
    // value is failure cause Exception in error case
    private static final Map<Provider, Object> verificationResults =
            new IdentityHashMap<>();

It fails when it calls the following code in JceSecurity.java because the verificationResults Map<Provider, Object> has not been initialized because the SecureRandom() constructor ends up calling the JceSecurity.getVerificationResult() static method that makes use of the Map!  That explains the NullPointerException.

The fix to the issue should be simple, just move the initialization of the verificationResults Map BEFORE the SecureRandom initialization in JceSecurity.java

Because verificationResults is not initialized, the line highlighted below fails (Because the Map has not been initialized).
/*
     * Verify that the provider JAR files are signed properly, which
     * means the signer's certificate can be traced back to a
     * JCE trusted CA.
     * Return null if ok, failure Exception if verification failed.
     */
    static synchronized Exception getVerificationResult(Provider p) {
        Object o = verificationResults.get(p);
        if (o == PROVIDER_VERIFIED) {
            return null;
        } else if (o != null) {
            return (Exception)o;
        }
        if (verifyingProviders.get(p) != null) {
            // this method is static synchronized, must be recursion
            // return failure now but do not save the result
            return new NoSuchProviderException("Recursion during verification");
        }
        try {
            verifyingProviders.put(p, Boolean.FALSE);
            URL providerURL = getCodeBase(p.getClass());
            verifyProvider(providerURL, p);
            // Verified ok, cache result
            verificationResults.put(p, PROVIDER_VERIFIED);
            return null;
        } catch (Exception e) {
            verificationResults.put(p, e);
            return e;
        } finally {
            verifyingProviders.remove(p);
        }
    }

Cheers,

John Gray




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