Prohledat stránky podpory

Vyhněte se podvodům. Za účelem poskytnutí podpory vás nikdy nežádáme, abyste zavolali nebo poslali SMS na nějaké telefonní číslo nebo abyste sdělili své osobní údaje. Jakékoliv podezřelé chování nám prosím nahlaste pomocí odkazu „Nahlásit zneužití“.

Learn More

unsuccessful when trying to force Firefox to send TLS 1.0 requests by setting security.tls.version.max=1

  • 4 odpovědi
  • 6 má tento problém
  • 161 zobrazení
  • Poslední odpověď od bennetthaselton

more options

I want to test a group of sites to see if they accept TLS 1.0 connections.

Many sources including https://support.mozilla.org/en-US/questions/1101896 say that you can force Firefox to send TLS 1.0 requests by setting security.tls.version.max to 1, and I have done this successfully in the past to test if a site supported TLS 1.0. (Sometimes a site allows access over TLS 1.0 but disables certain features such as submitting credit card numbers.)

However, I am now getting inconsistent results when trying to do this. I set security.tls.version.max to 1 and restart the browser. Then I go to https://www.google.com/, click the padlock and navigate to more information, and it says "Connected encrypted (TLS_AES_128_GCM_SHA256, 128 bit keys, TLS 1.3)". Note, TLS 1.3. But I could swear the first time I loaded https://www.google.com/ the same dialog box said the connection was using TLS 1.0.

Meanwhile other sites like https://wikipedia.org/ and https://twitter.com/ fail to load with SSL_ERROR_PROTOCOL_VERSION_ALERT. I understand why (they don't support TLS 1.0), but I don't understand why the connection to Google is showing TLS 1.3 in the same browser window.

Is there some mechanism by which a site that initially accepts the TLS 1.0 connection, is then forcing Firefox to switch to 1.3, overriding the security.tls.version.max setting? That doesn't make sense but it's the only thing that seems consistent with observation.

Thanks!

I want to test a group of sites to see if they accept TLS 1.0 connections. Many sources including https://support.mozilla.org/en-US/questions/1101896 say that you can force Firefox to send TLS 1.0 requests by setting security.tls.version.max to 1, and I have done this successfully in the past to test if a site supported TLS 1.0. (Sometimes a site allows access over TLS 1.0 but disables certain features such as submitting credit card numbers.) However, I am now getting inconsistent results when trying to do this. I set security.tls.version.max to 1 and restart the browser. Then I go to https://www.google.com/, click the padlock and navigate to more information, and it says "Connected encrypted (TLS_AES_128_GCM_SHA256, 128 bit keys, TLS 1.3)". Note, TLS 1.3. But I could swear the first time I loaded https://www.google.com/ the same dialog box said the connection was using TLS 1.0. Meanwhile other sites like https://wikipedia.org/ and https://twitter.com/ fail to load with SSL_ERROR_PROTOCOL_VERSION_ALERT. I understand why (they don't support TLS 1.0), but I don't understand why the connection to Google is showing TLS 1.3 in the same browser window. Is there some mechanism by which a site that initially accepts the TLS 1.0 connection, is then forcing Firefox to switch to 1.3, overriding the security.tls.version.max setting? That doesn't make sense but it's the only thing that seems consistent with observation. Thanks!

Všechny odpovědi (4)

more options
more options

Works for me. This gives me TLS 1.0

  • security.tls.version.max 1
  • security.tls.version.min 1

This gives me TLS 1.1

  • security.tls.version.max 2
  • security.tls.version.min 1
more options

James said

https://hacks.mozilla.org/2020/02/its-the-boot-for-tls-1-0-and-tls-1-1/ https://www.mozilla.org/firefox/78.0/releasenotes/ https://support.mozilla.org/en-US/kb/secure-connection-failed-firefox-did-not-connect Note: The option to enable TLS 1.0 and 1.1 has been removed from the error page in Firefox version 97.

I see that, but it just says that by default, they've now set security.tls.version.min to 3 by default, i.e. requiring mininum TLS 1.2 by default.

That doesn't really address the problem I'm seeing, which is that I set security.tls.version.min and security.tls.version.max to 1 (i.e. TLS 1.0) manually, but when I browse www.google.com I see it (sometimes) switching to TLS 1.3 anyway.

more options

cor-el said

Works for me. This gives me TLS 1.0
  • security.tls.version.max 1
  • security.tls.version.min 1
This gives me TLS 1.1
  • security.tls.version.max 2
  • security.tls.version.min 1

What version are you on? I'm on 91.13.0esr on Windows 10.