This PR changes the way in which the SSL analyzer tracks the direction
of connections. So far, the SSL analyzer assumed that the originator of
a connection would send the client hello (and other associated
client-side events), and that the responder would be the SSL servers.
In some circumstances this is not true, and the initiator of a
connection is the server, with the responder being the client. So far
this confused some of the internal statekeeping logic and could lead to
mis-parsing of extensions.
This reversal of roles can happen in DTLS, if a connection uses STUN -
and potentially in some StartTLS protocols.
This PR tracks the direction of a TLS connection using the hello
request, client hello and server hello handshake messages. Furthermore,
it changes the SSL events from providing is_orig to providing is_client,
where is_client is true for the client_side of a connection. Since the
argument positioning in the event has not changed, old scripts will
continue to work seamlessly - the new semantics are what everyone
writing SSL scripts will have expected in any case.
There is a new event that is raised when a connection is flipped. A
weird is raised if a flip happens repeatedly.
Addresses GH-2198.
These are no longer loaded by default due to the performance impact they
cause simply by being loaded (they have event handlers for commonly
generated events) and they aren't generally useful enough to justify it.
This also fixes the heartbleed detector to work for encrypted attacks in this
branch again. It stopped working, because the SSL analyzer now successfully detects
established connections, and the scripts usually disable analyzing after that.
(The heartbeat branch should not have been affected)