Wildcard server names should not match subdomains.
Quote from RFC2818:
...Names may contain the wildcard
character * which is considered to match any single domain name
component or component fragment. E.g., *.a.com matches foo.a.com but
not bar.foo.a.com. f*.com matches foo.com but not bar.com.
fix#6610
When socket, passed in `tls.connect()` `options` argument is not yet
connected to the server, `_handle` gets assigned to a `net.Socket`,
instead of `TLSSocket`.
When socket is connecting to the remote server (i.e. not yet connected,
but already past dns resolve phase), derive `_connecting` property from
it, because otherwise `afterConnect()` will throw an assertion.
fix#6443
When `tls.connect()` is called with `socket` option, it should try to
reuse hostname previously passed to `net.connect()` and only after that
fall back to `'localhost'`.
fix#6409
`server.SNICallback` was initialized with `SNICallback.bind(this)`, and
therefore check `this.SNICallback === SNICallback` was always false, and
`_tls_wrap.js` always thought that it was a custom callback instead of
default one. Which in turn was causing clienthello parser to be enabled
regardless of presence of SNI contexts.
It shouldn't ignore it!
There're two possibile cases, which should be handled properly:
1. Having a default `SNICallback` which is using contexts, added with
`server.addContext(...)` routine
2. Having a custom `SNICallback`.
In first case we may want to opt-out setting `.onsniselect` method (and
thus save some CPU time), if there're no contexts added. But, if custom
`SNICallback` is used, `.onsniselect` should always be set, because
server contexts don't affect it.
Split `tls.js` into `_tls_legacy.js`, containing legacy
`createSecurePair` API, and `_tls_wrap.js` containing new code based on
`tls_wrap` binding.
Remove tests that are no longer useful/valid.