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This question is a bit of a follow on to this Q&A:

TLS 1.2 Handshake: Does the server have to take all extensions sent by the Client?

If the client sends an Extension that the server does not recognize, the server can simply ignore it and continue with a Server Hello -- the client is then free to terminate the session if that particular extension was required by the client, or continue the handshake without that extension.

My question: Are there any TLS Extensions which some servers might choose to require, thereby responding to a Client Hello which doesn't include those extensions by terminating the session?

Granted, this could be different on a deployment by deployment basis, but if there are some extensions that might be lend themselves to being required by the server, they would suffice as the answer to this question.

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  • This feels a bit like an XY Problem. Is purely a question for academic curiosity, or do you have some concrete problem you're trying to solve? (and if so, what are you trying to do?) Commented Feb 23, 2021 at 4:40
  • @MikeOunsworth I'm trying to fully understand the behavior of Extensions in TLS. I understand the Client initiates extensions in the Client Hello, and that the Server can respond omitting extensions it doesn't support -- leaving it to the Client to decide whether to continue the handshake or not. I'm trying to understand if the Server has the option to require any Extensions as well. Obviously, I know a Server can be programmed as such, but I'm trying to see if that actually occurs in real life.
    – Eddie
    Commented Feb 23, 2021 at 4:57
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    @Eddie: I'm not sure if this fits your question, but it is pretty common that a server will croak if the client does not send the server_name extension (SNI) or if this extension contains a name which is not configured at the server. This is not actually about requiring the extension itself, but since the server otherwise cannot send the appropriate certificate matching the requested name. Commented Feb 23, 2021 at 5:31
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    @Eddie: It is not uncommon to just get a generic handshake failure or even simply a close of the underlying TCP connection on any kind of TLS related errors, even if there would be in theory a more specific TLS alert. But I've also seen unrecognized name. Unsupported extension instead would not be a good fit for such a problem, since it is about the (missing) value and not about an unknown extension. Commented Feb 23, 2021 at 5:55
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    @SteffenUllrich+ I've answered at least a dozen Qs on several Stacks over the last few years "why does my program/system fail to connect with TLS (or HTTPS)" and the answer is "missing SNI". IIRC most of them were alert 40 but some were RST or even FIN. Commented Feb 24, 2021 at 3:20

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