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Maintaining OpenSSL

OpenSSL is automatically updated by the update-openssl-action. There is also a script in tools/dep_updaters that can be used to update it. This document describes how to manually update deps/openssl/.

If you need to provide updates across all active release lines you will currently need to generate four PRs as follows:

  • a PR for main which is generated following the instructions below for OpenSSL 3.x.x.
  • a PR for 18.x following the instructions in the v18.x-staging version of this guide.
  • a PR for 16.x following the instructions in the v16.x-staging version of this guide.

Use of the quictls/openssl fork

Node.js currently uses the quictls/openssl fork, which closely tracks the main openssl/openssl releases with the addition of APIs to support the QUIC protocol.

Details on the fork, as well as the latest sources, can be found at https://github.com/quictls/openssl.

Branches are used per OpenSSL version (for instance, https://github.com/quictls/openssl/tree/OpenSSL_1_1_1j+quic).

Requirements

  • Linux environment.
  • perl Only Perl version 5 is tested.
  • nasm (https://www.nasm.us/) Version 2.11 or higher is needed.
  • GNU as in binutils. Version 2.26 or higher is needed.

0. Check requirements

% perl -v

This is perl 5, version 22, subversion 1 (v5.22.1) built for
x86_64-linux-gnu-thread-multi
(with 60 registered patches, see perl -V for more detail)

% as --version
GNU assembler (GNU Binutils for Ubuntu) 2.26.1
Copyright (C) 2015 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
...
% nasm -v
NASM version 2.11.08

1. Obtain and extract new OpenSSL sources

Get a new source from https://github.com/quictls/openssl/tree/openssl-3.0.5+quic and copy all files into deps/openssl/openssl. Then add all files and commit them. (The link above, and the branch, will change with each new OpenSSL release).

OpenSSL 3.x.x

git clone https://github.com/quictls/openssl
cd openssl
cd ../node/deps/openssl
rm -rf openssl
cp -R ../../../openssl openssl
rm -rf openssl/.git* openssl/.travis*
git add --all openssl
git commit openssl
deps: upgrade openssl sources to quictls/openssl-3.0.5+quic

This updates all sources in deps/openssl/openssl by:
$ git clone [email protected]:quictls/openssl.git
$ cd openssl
$ git checkout openssl-3.0.5+quic
$ cd ../node/deps/openssl
$ rm -rf openssl
$ cp -R ../../../openssl openssl
$ rm -rf openssl/.git* openssl/.travis*
$ git add --all openssl
$ git commit openssl

2. Execute make in deps/openssl/config directory

Use make to regenerate all platform dependent files in deps/openssl/config/archs/:

# On non-Linux machines
make gen-openssl

# On Linux machines
make -C deps/openssl/config clean
make -C deps/openssl/config

Note: If the 32-bit Windows is failing to compile run this workflow instead:

make -C deps/openssl/config clean
# Edit deps/openssl/openssl/crypto/perlasm/x86asm.pl changing
# #ifdef to %ifdef to make it compatible to nasm on 32-bit Windows.
# See: https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/43603#issuecomment-1170670844
# Reference: https://github.com/openssl/openssl/issues/18459

3. Check diffs

Check diffs to ensure updates are right. Even if there are no updates in openssl sources, buildinf.h files will be updated because they have timestamp data in them.

git diff -- deps/openssl

Note: On Windows, OpenSSL Configure generates a makefile that can be used for the nmake command. The make command in step 2 (above) uses Makefile_VC-WIN64A and Makefile_VC-WIN32 that are manually created. When source files or build options are updated in Windows, it needs to change these two Makefiles by hand. If you are not sure, please ask @shigeki for details.

4. Commit and make test

Update all architecture dependent files. Do not forget to git add or remove files if they are changed before committing:

git add deps/openssl/config/archs
git add deps/openssl/openssl
git commit

The commit message can be written as (with the openssl version set to the relevant value):

OpenSSL 3.x.x

deps: update archs files for quictls/openssl-3.0.5+quic

After an OpenSSL source update, all the config files need to be
regenerated and committed by:
$ make -C deps/openssl/config
$ git add deps/openssl/config/archs
$ git add deps/openssl/openssl
$ git commit

Finally, build Node.js and run the tests.