5 # An odyssey through lots of things that have to be right before OpenID works
7 Having just (at last) made an ikiwiki installation accept my
8 OpenID, I have learned many of the things that may have to be checked
9 when getting the [[plugins/openid]] plugin to work. (These are probably
10 the reasons why [ikiwiki.info](/) itself won't accept my OpenID!)
12 Just to describe my OpenID setup a bit (and why it makes a good stress-test
13 for the OpenID plugin :).
15 I'm using my personal home page URL as my OpenID. My page lives at
16 a shared-hosting service I have hired. It contains links that delegate
17 my OpenID processing to [indieauth.com](https://indieauth.com).
19 IndieAuth, in turn, uses
20 [rel-me authentication](http://microformats.org/wiki/RelMeAuth) to find
21 an [OAuth](http://microformats.org/wiki/OAuth) provider that can authenticate
22 me. (At present, I am using [github](http://github.com) for that, which
23 is an OAuth provider but not an OpenID provider, so the gatewaying provided
24 by IndieAuth solves that problem.) As far as ikiwiki is concerned,
25 IndieAuth is my OpenID provider; the details beyond that are transparent.
27 So, what were the various issues I had to sort out before my first successful
28 login with the [[plugins/openid]] plugin?
30 ## no_identity_server: Could not determine ID provider from URL.
32 This is the message [ikiwiki.info](/) shows as soon as I enter my home URL
33 as an OpenID. It is also the first one I got on my own ikiwiki installation.
35 ### various possible causes ...
37 There could be lots of causes. Maybe:
39 * the offered OpenID is an `https:` URL and there is an issue in checking
40 the certificate, so the page can't be retrieved?
41 * the page can be retrieved, but it isn't well-formed HTML and the library
42 can't parse it for the needed OpenID links?
45 ### make a luckier setting of useragent ?!
47 In my case, it was none of the above. It turns out my shared-hosting provider
48 has a rule that refuses requests with `User-Agent: libwww-perl/6.03` (!!).
49 This is the sort of problem that's really hard to anticipate or plan around.
50 I could fix it (_for this case!_) by changing `useragent:` in `ikiwiki.setup`
51 to a different string that my goofy provider lets through.
53 __Recommendation:__ set `useragent:` in `ikiwiki.setup` to some
54 unlikely-to-be-blacklisted value. I can't guess what the best
55 unlikely-to-be-blacklisted value is; if there is one, it's probably the
56 next one all the rude bots will be using anyway, and some goofy provider
57 like mine will blacklist it.
59 > If your shared hosting provider is going to randomly break functionality,
60 > I would suggest "voting with your wallet" and taking your business to
63 > In principle we could set the default UA (if `$config{useragent}` is
64 > unspecified) to `IkiWiki/3.20140915`, or `IkiWiki/3.20140915 libwww-perl/6.03`
65 > (which would be the "most correct" option AIUI), or some such.
66 > That might work, or might get randomly blacklisted too, depending on the
67 > whims of shared hosting providers. If you can't trust your provider to
68 > behave helpfully then there isn't much we can do about it.
70 > Blocking requests according to UA seems fundamentally flawed, since
71 > I'm fairly sure no hosting provider can afford to blacklist UAs that
72 > claim to be, for instance, Firefox or Chrome. I wouldn't want
73 > to patch IkiWiki to claim to be an interactive browser by default,
74 > but malicious script authors will have no such qualms, so I would
75 > argue that your provider's strategy is already doomed... --[[smcv]]
77 >> I agree, and I'll ask them to fix it (and probably refer them to this page).
78 >> One reason they still have my business is that their customer service has
79 >> been notably good; I always get a response from a human on the first try,
80 >> and on the first or second try from a human who understands what I'm saying
81 >> and is able to fix it. With a few exceptions over the years. I've dealt with organizations not like that....
83 >> But I included the note here because I'm sure if _they're_ doing it, there's
84 >> probably some nonzero number of other hosting providers where it's also
85 >> happening, so a person setting up OpenID and being baffled by this failure
86 >> needs to know to check for it. Also, while the world of user-agent strings
87 >> can't have anything but relatively luckier and unluckier choices, maybe
88 >> `libwww/perl` is an especially unlucky one?
90 ## Error: OpenID failure: naive_verify_failed_network: Could not contact ID provider to verify response.
92 Again, this could have various causes. It was helpful to bump the debug level
93 and get some logging, to see:
95 500 Can't connect to indieauth.com:443 (Net::SSL from Crypt-SSLeay can't
96 verify hostnames; either install IO::Socket::SSL or turn off verification
97 by setting the PERL_LWP_SSL_VERIFY_HOSTNAME environment variable to 0)
99 I don't belong to the camp that solves every verification problem by turning
100 verification off, so this meant finding out how to get verification to be done.
101 It turns out there are two different Perl modules that can be used for SSL:
103 * `IO::Socket::SSL` (verifies hostnames)
104 * `Net::SSL` (_does not_ verify hostnames)
106 Both were installed on my hosted server. How was Perl deciding which one
109 ### set `PERL_NET_HTTPS_SSL_SOCKET_CLASS` appropriately
112 [there's an environment variable](https://rt.cpan.org/Public/Bug/Display.html?id=71599).
113 So just set `PERL_NET_HTTPS_SSL_SOCKET_CLASS` to `IO::Socket::SSL` and the
114 right module gets used, right?
116 [Wrong](https://github.com/csirtgadgets/LWPx-ParanoidAgent/commit/fed6f7d7df8619df0754e8883cfad2ac15703a38#diff-2).
117 That change was made to `ParanoidAgent.pm` back in November 2013 because of an
118 unrelated [bug](https://github.com/csirtgadgets/LWPx-ParanoidAgent/issues/4)
119 in `IO::Socket::SSL`. Essentially, _hmm, something goes wrong in
120 `IO::Socket::SSL` when reading certain large documents, so we'll fix it by
121 forcing the use of `Net::SSL` instead (the one that never verifies hostnames!),
122 no matter what the admin has set `PERL_NET_HTTPS_SSL_SOCKET_CLASS` to!_
124 ### undo change that broke `PERL_NET_HTTPS_SSL_SOCKET_CLASS`
126 Plenty of [comments](https://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=738493)
127 quickly appeared about how good an idea that wasn't, and it was corrected in
128 June 2014 with [one commit](https://github.com/csirtgadgets/LWPx-ParanoidAgent/commit/a92ed8f45834a6167ff62d3e7330bb066b307a35)
129 to fix the original reading-long-documents issue in `IO::Socket::SSL` and
130 [another commit](https://github.com/csirtgadgets/LWPx-ParanoidAgent/commit/815c691ad5554a219769a90ca5f4001ae22a4019)
131 that reverts the forcing of `Net::SSL` no matter how the environment is set.
133 Unfortunately, there isn't a release in CPAN yet that includes those two
134 commits, but they are only a few lines to edit into your own locally-installed
137 > To be clear, these are patches to [[!cpan LWPx::ParanoidAgent]].
138 > Debian's `liblwpx-paranoidagent-perl (>= 1.10-3)` appears to
139 > have those two patches. --[[smcv]]
141 ## Still naive_verify_failed_network, new improved reason
143 500 Can't connect to indieauth.com:443 (SSL connect attempt failed
144 with unknown error error:14090086:SSL
145 routines:SSL3_GET_SERVER_CERTIFICATE:certificate verify failed)
147 Yay, at least it's trying to verify! Now why can't it verify IndieAuth's
150 [Here's why](https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6066#section-3). As it turns out,
151 [indieauth.com](https://indieauth.com/) is itself a virtual host on a shared
152 server. If you naively try
154 openssl s_client -connect indieauth.com:443
156 you get back a certificate for [indieweb.org](https://indieweb.org/)
157 instead, so the hostname won't verify. If you explicitly indicate what server
158 name you're connecting to:
160 openssl s_client -connect indieauth.com:443 -servername indieauth.com
162 then, magically, the correct certificate comes back.
164 ### ensure `OpenSSL`, `Net::SSLeay`, `IO::Socket::SSL` new enough for SNI
166 If your `openssl` doesn't recognize the `-servername` option, it is too old
167 to do SNI, and a newer version needs to be built and installed. In fact,
168 even though SNI support was reportedly backported into OpenSSL 0.9.8f, it will
169 not be used by `IO::Socket::SSL` unless it is
170 [1.0 or higher](http://search.cpan.org/~sullr/IO-Socket-SSL-1.998/lib/IO/Socket/SSL.pod#SNI_Support).
172 Then a recent `Net::SSLeay` perl module needs to be built and linked against it.
174 > I would tend to be somewhat concerned about the update status and security
175 > of a shared hosting platform that is still on an OpenSSL major version from
176 > pre-2010 - it might be fine, because it might be RHEL or some similarly
177 > change-averse distribution backporting security fixes to ye olde branch,
178 > but equally it might be as bad as it seems at first glance.
179 > "Let the buyer beware", I think... --[[smcv]]
181 >> As far as I can tell, this particular provider _is_ on Red Hat (EL 5).
182 >> I can't conclusively tell because I'm in what appears to be a CloudLinux container when I'm in,
183 >> and certain parts of the environment (like `rpm`) I can't see. But everything
184 >> I _can_ see is like several RHEL5 boxen I know and love.
187 ### Local OpenSSL installation will need certs to trust
189 Bear in mind that the OpenSSL distribution doesn't come with a collection
190 of trusted issuer certs. If a newer version is built and installed locally
191 (say, on a shared server where the system locations can't be written), it will
192 need to be given a directory of trusted issuer certs, say by linking to the
193 system-provided ones. However, a change to the certificate hash algorithm used
194 for the symlinks in that directory was [reportedly](http://www.cilogon.org/openssl1)
195 made with OpenSSL 1.0.0. So if the system-provided trusted certificate directory
196 was set up for an earlier OpenSSL version, all the certificates in it will be
197 fine but the hash symlinks will be wrong. That can be fixed by linking only the
198 named certificate files from the system directory into the newly-installed one,
199 and then running the new version of `c_rehash` there.
201 ## Still certificate verify failed
203 Using [SNI](https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6066#section-3)-supporting versions
204 of `IO::Socket::SSL`, `Net::SSLeay`, and `OpenSSL` doesn't do any good if an
205 upper layer hasn't passed down the name of the host being connected to so the
206 SSL layer can SNI for it.
208 ### ensure that `LWPx::ParanoidAgent` passes server name to SSL layer for SNI
210 That was fixed in `LWPx::ParanoidAgent` with
211 [this commit](https://github.com/csirtgadgets/LWPx-ParanoidAgent/commit/df6df19ccdeeb717c709cccb011af35d3713f546),
212 which needs to be backported by hand if it hasn't made it into a CPAN release
215 > Also in Debian's `liblwpx-paranoidagent-perl (>= 1.10-3)`, for the record.
218 Only that still doesn't end the story, because that hand didn't know what
219 [this hand](https://github.com/noxxi/p5-io-socket-ssl/commit/4f83a3cd85458bd2141f0a9f22f787174d51d587#diff-1)
220 was doing. What good is passing the name in
221 `PeerHost` if the SSL code looks in `PeerAddr` first ... and then, if that
222 doesn't match a regex for a hostname, decides you didn't supply one at all,
223 without even looking at `PeerHost`?
225 Happily, is is possible to assign a key that _explicitly_ supplies the
228 --- LWPx/Protocol/http_paranoid.pm 2014-09-08 03:33:00.000000000 -0400
229 +++ LWPx/Protocol/http_paranoid.pm 2014-09-08 03:33:27.000000000 -0400
232 $sock = $self->socket_class->new(PeerAddr => $addr,
234 + SSL_hostname => $host,
237 Timeout => $conn_timeout,
239 ... not submitted upstream yet, so needs to be applied by hand.
241 > I've [reported this to Debian](https://bugs.debian.org/761635)
242 > (which is where ikiwiki.info's supporting packages come from).
243 > Please report it upstream too, if the Debian maintainer doesn't
244 > get there first. --[[smcv]]
248 And with that, ladies and gents, I got my first successful OpenID login!
249 I'm pretty sure that if the same fixes can be applied to
250 [ikiwiki.info](/) itself, a wider range of OpenID logins (like mine, for
251 example :) will work here too.