SSL built-in actions and user-defined actions
Unless you need only the built-in actions in your policies, you have to create the actions before creating the policies. Then, you can specify the actions when you create the policies. The built-in actions are of two types, control actions and data actions. You use control actions in control policies, and data actions in data policies.
The built-in control actions are:
- DOCLIENTAUTH—Perform client certificate authentication. (Not supported for TLS1.3)
- NOCLIENTAUTH—Do not perform client certificate authentication. (Not supported for TLS1.3)
The built-in data actions are:
- RESET—Close the connection by sending an RST packet to the client.
- DROP—Drop all packets from the client. The connection remains open until the client closes it.
- NOOP—Forward the packet without performing any operation on it.
Note: Any dependent actions to client authentication, such as clientCertVerification and ssllogProfile, are not supported with the TLS 1.3 protocol.
You can create user-defined data actions. If you enable client authentication, you can create an SSL action to insert client-certificate data into the request header before forwarding the request to the web server.
If a policy evaluation results in an undefined state, an UNDEF action is performed. For either a data policy or a control policy, you can specify RESET, DROP, or NOOP as the UNDEF action. For a control policy, you also have the option of specifying DOCLIENTAUTH or NOCLIENTAUTH.
Examples of built-in actions in a policy
In the following example, if the client sends a cipher other than an EXPORT category cipher, the Citrix ADC appliance requests client authentication. The client has to provide a valid certificate for a successful transaction.
add ssl policy pol1 -rule CLIENT.SSL.CIPHER_EXPORTABLE.NOT -reqAction DOCLIENTAUTH
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The following examples assume that client authentication is enabled.
If the version in the certificate provided by the user matches the version in the policy, no action is taken and the packet is forwarded:
add ssl policy pol1 -rule CLIENT.SSL.CLIENT_CERT.VERSION.EQ(2) -reqAction NOOP
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If the version in the certificate provided by the user matches the version in the policy, the connection is dropped:
add ssl policy pol1 -rule CLIENT.SSL.CLIENT_CERT.VERSION.EQ(2) -reqAction DROP
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If the version in the certificate provided by the user matches the version in the policy, the connection is reset:
add ssl policy pol1 -rule CLIENT.SSL.CLIENT_CERT.VERSION.EQ(2) -reqAction RESET
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Client certificate verification with policy based client authentication
You can set client certificate verification to mandatory or option when you have configured policy based client authentication. Default is mandatory.
Set client certificate verification to optional using the CLI
At the command prompt, type:
add ssl action <name> ((-clientAuth ( DOCLIENTAUTH | NOCLIENTAUTH ) [-clientCertVerification ( Mandatory | Optional )]
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Example:
add ssl action sslact -clientauth DOCLIENTAUTH -clientcertverification OPTIONAL
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Set client certificate verification to optional using the GUI
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Navigate to Traffic Management > SSL > Policies.
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On the SSL Actions tab, click Add.
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Specify a name and in the Client Certificate Verification list, select Optional.
User-defined SSL actions
In addition to built-in actions, you can also configure other SSL actions depending on your deployment. These actions are called user-defined actions.
Configure a user-defined SSL action by using the CLI
At the command prompt, type the following commands to configure an action and verify the configuration:
add SSL action <name> -clientAuth(DOCLIENTAUTH | NOCLIENTAUTH) -clientCert (ENABLED | DISABLED) certHeader <string> -clientHeader <string> -clientCertSerialNumber (ENABLED | DISABLED) -certSerialHeader <string> -clientCertSubject (ENABLED | DISABLED) -certSubjectHeader <string> -clientCertHash (ENABLED | DISABLED) -certHashHeader <string> -clientCertIssuer (ENABLED | DISABLED) -certIssuerHeader <string> -sessionID (ENABLED | DISABLED) -sessionIDheader <string> -cipher (ENABLED | DISABLED) -cipherHeader <string> -clientCertNotBefore (ENABLED | DISABLED) -certNotBeforeHeader <string> -clientCertNotAfter (ENABLED | DISABLED) -certNotAfterHeader <string> -OWASupport (ENABLED | DISABLED)
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show ssl action [<name>]
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Example:
add ssl action Action-SSL-ClientCert -clientCert ENABLED -certHeader "X-Client-Cert"
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show ssl action Action-SSL-ClientCert
1) Name: Action-SSL-ClientCert
Data Insertion Action:
Cert Header: ENABLED Cert Tag: X-Client-Cert
Done
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Configure a user-defined SSL action by using the GUI
Navigate to Traffic Management > SSL > Policies and, on the Actions tab, click Add.
Configure an SSL action to forward client traffic to another virtual server
Admins can configure an SSL action to forward the client traffic received on an SSL virtual server to another virtual server to avoid SSL offloading. Or for terminating the connection on the ADC appliance. This virtual server can be of the type: SSL, TCP, or SSL_BRIDGE. For example, admins can choose to forward the request to another virtual server for further action instead of terminating the connection if any of the following cases:
- The appliance does not have a certificate.
- The appliance does not support a specific cipher.
To achieve the above, a new bind point ‘CLIENTHELLO_REQ’ is added to evaluate client traffic when a client hello is received. If the policy bound to the virtual server receiving client traffic evaluates to true after parsing the client hello, the traffic is forwarded to another virtual server. If this virtual server is of type SSL, it performs the handshake. If this virtual server is of type TCP or SSL_BRIDGE, the back-end server performs the handshake.
In release 12.1-49.x, only the forward and reset actions are supported for the CLIENTHELLO_REQ bind point. The following expression prefixes are available:
- CLIENT.SSL.CLIENT_HELLO.CIPHERS.HAS_HEXCODE
- CLIENT.SSL.CLIENT_HELLO.CLIENT_VERSION
- CLIENT.SSL.CLIENT_HELLO.IS_RENEGOTIATE
- CLIENT.SSL.CLIENT_HELLO.IS_REUSE
- CLIENT.SSL.CLIENT_HELLO.IS_SCSV
- CLIENT.SSL.CLIENT_HELLO.IS_SESSION_TICKET
- CLIENT.SSL.CLIENT_HELLO.LENGTH
- CLIENT.SSL.CLIENT_HELLO.SNI
- CLIENT.SSL.CLIENT_HELLO.ALPN.HAS_NEXTPROTOCOL (from release 13.0 build 61.x)
For a description of these prefixes, see Advanced policy expressions: parsing SSL.
A parameter forward
is added to the add SSL action
command and a new bind point CLIENTHELLO_REQ
is added to the bind ssl vserver
command.
Configuration using the CLI
At the command prompt, type:
add ssl action <name> -forward <virtual server name>
add ssl policy <name> -rule <expression> -action <string>
bind ssl vserver <vServerName> -policyName <string> -priority <positive_integer> -type <type>
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EXAMPLE:
add ssl action act1 -forward v2
add ssl policy pol1 -rule client.ssl.client_hello.ciphers.has_hexcode(0x002f) -action act1
bind ssl vserver v1 -policyName pol1 -priority 1 -type CLIENTHELLO_REQ
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Configuration using the GUI
Navigate to Traffic Management > SSL > Policies.
Create SSL action:
- In SSL Actions, click Add.
- In Create SSL Action, specify a name for the action.
- In Forward Action Virtual Server, select an existing virtual server or add a new virtual server to forward the traffic to.
- Optionally, set other parameters.
- Click Create.
Create SSL policy:
- In SSL Policies, click Add.
- In Create SSL Policy, specify a name for the policy.
- In Action, select the action that you created earlier.
- In Expression Editor, enter the rule to evaluate.
- Click Create.
Create or add a virtual server and bind policy:
- Navigate to Traffic Management > Load Balancing > Virtual Servers.
- Add or select a virtual server.
- In Advanced Settings, click SSL Policies.
- Click in the SSL Policy section.
- In Select Policy, select the policy that you created earlier.
- In Policy Binding, specify a priority for the policy.
- In Type, select CLIENTHELLO_REQ.
- Click Bind.
- Click Done.
For the end-to-end configuration for the most popular use cases, see the following topics:
SSL action to selectively pick CAs based on SNI for client authentication
You can send only the list of CAs based on SNI (domain) in the client certificate request rather than the list of all the CAs bound to an SSL virtual server. For example, when a client hello is received, only the CA certificates based on the SSL policy expression (for example, SNI) are sent. To send a specific set of certificates, you must create a CA certificates group. Then, bind this group to an SSL action, and bind the action to an SSL policy. If the policy bound to the virtual server receiving client traffic evaluates to true after parsing the client hello, only a specific CA certificates group is sent in the client request certificate.
Earlier, you had to bind CA certificates to an SSL virtual server. With this enhancement, you can simply add CA certificate groups and associate them to an SSL action.
Note: Enable client authentication and SNI on the SSL virtual server. Bind the correct SNI certificates to the virtual server.
Perform the following steps:
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Add a CA certificate group.
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Add certificate-key pairs.
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Bind the certificate-key pairs to this group.
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Add an SSL action.
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Add an SSL policy. Specify the action in the policy.
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Bind the policy to an SSL virtual server. Specify the bind point as CLIENTHELLO_REQ.
Configuration using the CLI
At the command prompt, type the following commands in a sequence:
add ssl caCertGroup <caCertGroupName>
add ssl certkey <certkey_name> -cert <cert> -key <key>
bind ssl caCertGroup <caCertGroupName> <certkey_name>
add ssl action <name> -caCertGrpName <string>
add ssl policy <name> -rule <expression> -action <string>
bind ssl vserver <vServerName> -policyName <string> -priority <positive_integer> -type CLIENTHELLO_REQ
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Example:
add ssl cacertGroup ca_cert_group
add ssl certkey ca_certkey1 -cert cacert1 -key cakey1
add ssl certkey ca_certkey2 -cert cacert2 -key cakey2
add ssl certkey snicert -cert snicert -key snikey
bind ssl cacertGroup ca_cert_group ca_certkey1
bind ssl caCertGroup ca_cert_group ca_certkey2
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sh ssl caCertGroup ca_cert_group
CA GROUP NAME: ca_cert_group
ACTIONS REFERRING: 1
1) CertKey Name: ca_certkey1 CA Certificate CRLCheck: Optional CA_Name Sent
2) CertKey Name: ca_certkey2 CA Certificate CRLCheck: Optional CA_Name Sent
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add ssl action pick_ca_group -cacertGrpName ca_cert_group
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sh ssl action pick_ca_group
1) Name: pick_ca_group
Type: Data Insertion
PickCaCertGroup: ca_cert_group
Hits: 0
Undef Hits: 0
Action Reference Count: 1
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add ssl policy snipolicy -rule client.ssl.client_hello.sni.contains("abc") -action pick_ca_group
bind ssl vserver v_SSL -policyName snipolicy -type CLIENTHELLO_REQ -priority 10
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sh ssl policy snipolicy
Name: snipolicy
Rule: client.ssl.client_hello.sni.contains("abc")
Action: pick_ca_group
UndefAction: Use Global
Hits: 0
Undef Hits: 0
Policy is bound to following entities
1) Bound to: CLIENTHELLO_REQ VSERVER v_SSL
Priority: 10
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set ssl vserver v_SSL -clientauth ENABLED -SNIEnable ENABLED
bind ssl vserver v_SSL -certkeyName snicert -sniCert
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sh ssl vserver v_SSL
Advanced SSL configuration for VServer v_SSL:
DH: DISABLED
DH Private-Key Exponent Size Limit: DISABLED Ephemeral RSA: ENABLED Refresh Count: 0
Session Reuse: ENABLED Timeout: 120 seconds
Cipher Redirect: DISABLED
SSLv2 Redirect: DISABLED
ClearText Port: 0
Client Auth: ENABLED Client Cert Required: Mandatory
SSL Redirect: DISABLED
Non FIPS Ciphers: DISABLED
SNI: ENABLED
OCSP Stapling: DISABLED
HSTS: DISABLED
HSTS IncludeSubDomains: NO
HSTS Max-Age: 0
SSLv2: DISABLED SSLv3: ENABLED TLSv1.0: ENABLED TLSv1.1: ENABLED TLSv1.2: ENABLED TLSv1.3: DISABLED
Push Encryption Trigger: Always
Send Close-Notify: YES
Strict Sig-Digest Check: DISABLED
Zero RTT Early Data: DISABLED
DHE Key Exchange With PSK: NO
Tickets Per Authentication Context: 1
ECC Curve: P_256, P_384, P_224, P_521
1) CertKey Name: snicert Server Certificate for SNI
Data policy
1) Policy Name: snipolicy Priority: 10
1) Cipher Name: DEFAULT
Description: Default cipher list with encryption strength >= 128bit
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Configuration using the GUI
Create CA certificates group and bind certificates to the group:
- Navigate to Traffic Management > SSL > CA Certificates Group.
- Click Add and specify a name for the group.
- Click Create.
- Select the CA certificate group and then click Show Bindings.
- Click Bind.
- In the CA Certificate Binding page, select an existing certificate or click Add to add a new certificate.
- Click Select and then click Bind.
- To bind another certificate, repeat steps 5 through 7.
- Click Close.
Navigate to Traffic Management > SSL > Policies.
Create SSL action:
- In SSL Actions, click Add.
- In Create SSL Action, specify a name for the action.
- In Forward Action Virtual Server, select an existing virtual server or add a virtual server to forward the traffic to.
- Optionally, set other parameters.
- Click Create.
Create SSL policy:
- In SSL Policies, click Add.
- In Create SSL Policy, specify a name for the policy.
- In Action, select the action created earlier.
- In Expression Editor, enter the rule to evaluate.
- Click Create.
Create or add a virtual server and bind policy:
- Navigate to Traffic Management > Load Balancing > Virtual Servers.
- Add or select a virtual server.
- In Advanced Settings, click SSL Policies.
- Click in the SSL Policy section.
- In Select Policy, select the policy that you created earlier.
- In Policy Binding, specify a priority for the policy.
- In Type, select CLIENTHELLO_REQ.
- Click Bind.
- Click Done.
Unbind a CA certificate group by using the GUI
- Navigate to Traffic Management > SSL > CA Certificates Group.
- Select a certificate group and click Show Bindings.
- Select the certificate to remove from the group and click Unbind.
- If prompted for confirmation, click **Yes••.
- Click Close.
Remove a CA certificate group by using the GUI
- Navigate to Traffic Management > SSL > CA Certificates Group.
- Select a certificate group and click Delete.
- If prompted for confirmation, click Yes.