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Antoine Pitroue1bc8982011-01-02 22:12:22 +00001:mod:`ssl` --- TLS/SSL wrapper for socket objects
2=================================================
Thomas Woutersed03b412007-08-28 21:37:11 +00003
4.. module:: ssl
Antoine Pitroue1bc8982011-01-02 22:12:22 +00005 :synopsis: TLS/SSL wrapper for socket objects
Thomas Wouters47b49bf2007-08-30 22:15:33 +00006
7.. moduleauthor:: Bill Janssen <bill.janssen@gmail.com>
Thomas Wouters47b49bf2007-08-30 22:15:33 +00008.. sectionauthor:: Bill Janssen <bill.janssen@gmail.com>
9
Terry Jan Reedyfa089b92016-06-11 15:02:54 -040010**Source code:** :source:`Lib/ssl.py`
Thomas Woutersed03b412007-08-28 21:37:11 +000011
Thomas Wouters1b7f8912007-09-19 03:06:30 +000012.. index:: single: OpenSSL; (use in module ssl)
13
14.. index:: TLS, SSL, Transport Layer Security, Secure Sockets Layer
15
Raymond Hettinger469271d2011-01-27 20:38:46 +000016--------------
17
Georg Brandl7f01a132009-09-16 15:58:14 +000018This module provides access to Transport Layer Security (often known as "Secure
19Sockets Layer") encryption and peer authentication facilities for network
20sockets, both client-side and server-side. This module uses the OpenSSL
21library. It is available on all modern Unix systems, Windows, Mac OS X, and
22probably additional platforms, as long as OpenSSL is installed on that platform.
Thomas Woutersed03b412007-08-28 21:37:11 +000023
24.. note::
25
Georg Brandl7f01a132009-09-16 15:58:14 +000026 Some behavior may be platform dependent, since calls are made to the
27 operating system socket APIs. The installed version of OpenSSL may also
Antoine Pitrou2463e5f2013-03-28 22:24:43 +010028 cause variations in behavior. For example, TLSv1.1 and TLSv1.2 come with
29 openssl version 1.0.1.
Thomas Woutersed03b412007-08-28 21:37:11 +000030
Christian Heimes3046fe42013-10-29 21:08:56 +010031.. warning::
Antoine Pitrou9eefe912013-11-17 15:35:33 +010032 Don't use this module without reading the :ref:`ssl-security`. Doing so
33 may lead to a false sense of security, as the default settings of the
34 ssl module are not necessarily appropriate for your application.
Christian Heimes3046fe42013-10-29 21:08:56 +010035
Christian Heimes3046fe42013-10-29 21:08:56 +010036
Georg Brandl7f01a132009-09-16 15:58:14 +000037This section documents the objects and functions in the ``ssl`` module; for more
38general information about TLS, SSL, and certificates, the reader is referred to
39the documents in the "See Also" section at the bottom.
Thomas Woutersed03b412007-08-28 21:37:11 +000040
Georg Brandl7f01a132009-09-16 15:58:14 +000041This module provides a class, :class:`ssl.SSLSocket`, which is derived from the
42:class:`socket.socket` type, and provides a socket-like wrapper that also
43encrypts and decrypts the data going over the socket with SSL. It supports
Antoine Pitroudab64262010-09-19 13:31:06 +000044additional methods such as :meth:`getpeercert`, which retrieves the
45certificate of the other side of the connection, and :meth:`cipher`,which
46retrieves the cipher being used for the secure connection.
Thomas Woutersed03b412007-08-28 21:37:11 +000047
Antoine Pitrou152efa22010-05-16 18:19:27 +000048For more sophisticated applications, the :class:`ssl.SSLContext` class
49helps manage settings and certificates, which can then be inherited
50by SSL sockets created through the :meth:`SSLContext.wrap_socket` method.
51
Christian Heimes01113fa2016-09-05 23:23:24 +020052.. versionchanged:: 3.6
53
54 OpenSSL 0.9.8, 1.0.0 and 1.0.1 are deprecated and no longer supported.
55 In the future the ssl module will require at least OpenSSL 1.0.2 or
56 1.1.0.
57
Antoine Pitrou152efa22010-05-16 18:19:27 +000058
Thomas Wouters1b7f8912007-09-19 03:06:30 +000059Functions, Constants, and Exceptions
60------------------------------------
61
Christian Heimes90f05a52018-02-27 09:21:34 +010062
63Socket creation
64^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
65
66Since Python 3.2 and 2.7.9, it is recommended to use the
67:meth:`SSLContext.wrap_socket` of an :class:`SSLContext` instance to wrap
68sockets as :class:`SSLSocket` objects. The helper functions
69:func:`create_default_context` returns a new context with secure default
70settings. The old :func:`wrap_socket` function is deprecated since it is
71both inefficient and has no support for server name indication (SNI) and
72hostname matching.
73
74Client socket example with default context and IPv4/IPv6 dual stack::
75
76 import socket
77 import ssl
78
79 hostname = 'www.python.org'
80 context = ssl.create_default_context()
81
82 with socket.create_connection((hostname, 443)) as sock:
83 with context.wrap_socket(sock, server_hostname=hostname) as ssock:
84 print(ssock.version())
85
86
87Client socket example with custom context and IPv4::
88
89 hostname = 'www.python.org'
90 # PROTOCOL_TLS_CLIENT requires valid cert chain and hostname
91 context = ssl.SSLContext(ssl.PROTOCOL_TLS_CLIENT)
92 context.load_verify_locations('path/to/cabundle.pem')
93
94 with socket.socket(socket.AF_INET, socket.SOCK_STREAM, 0) as sock:
95 with context.wrap_socket(sock, server_hostname=hostname) as ssock:
96 print(ssock.version())
97
98
99Server socket example listening on localhost IPv4::
100
101 context = ssl.SSLContext(ssl.PROTOCOL_TLS_SERVER)
102 context.load_cert_chain('/path/to/certchain.pem', '/path/to/private.key')
103
104 with socket.socket(socket.AF_INET, socket.SOCK_STREAM, 0) as sock:
105 sock.bind(('127.0.0.1', 8443))
106 sock.listen(5)
107 with context.wrap_socket(sock, server_side=True) as ssock:
108 conn, addr = ssock.accept()
109 ...
110
111
112Context creation
113^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
114
115A convenience function helps create :class:`SSLContext` objects for common
116purposes.
117
118.. function:: create_default_context(purpose=Purpose.SERVER_AUTH, cafile=None, capath=None, cadata=None)
119
120 Return a new :class:`SSLContext` object with default settings for
121 the given *purpose*. The settings are chosen by the :mod:`ssl` module,
122 and usually represent a higher security level than when calling the
123 :class:`SSLContext` constructor directly.
124
125 *cafile*, *capath*, *cadata* represent optional CA certificates to
126 trust for certificate verification, as in
127 :meth:`SSLContext.load_verify_locations`. If all three are
128 :const:`None`, this function can choose to trust the system's default
129 CA certificates instead.
130
131 The settings are: :data:`PROTOCOL_TLS`, :data:`OP_NO_SSLv2`, and
132 :data:`OP_NO_SSLv3` with high encryption cipher suites without RC4 and
133 without unauthenticated cipher suites. Passing :data:`~Purpose.SERVER_AUTH`
134 as *purpose* sets :data:`~SSLContext.verify_mode` to :data:`CERT_REQUIRED`
135 and either loads CA certificates (when at least one of *cafile*, *capath* or
136 *cadata* is given) or uses :meth:`SSLContext.load_default_certs` to load
137 default CA certificates.
138
139 .. note::
140 The protocol, options, cipher and other settings may change to more
141 restrictive values anytime without prior deprecation. The values
142 represent a fair balance between compatibility and security.
143
144 If your application needs specific settings, you should create a
145 :class:`SSLContext` and apply the settings yourself.
146
147 .. note::
148 If you find that when certain older clients or servers attempt to connect
149 with a :class:`SSLContext` created by this function that they get an error
150 stating "Protocol or cipher suite mismatch", it may be that they only
151 support SSL3.0 which this function excludes using the
152 :data:`OP_NO_SSLv3`. SSL3.0 is widely considered to be `completely broken
153 <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/POODLE>`_. If you still wish to continue to
154 use this function but still allow SSL 3.0 connections you can re-enable
155 them using::
156
157 ctx = ssl.create_default_context(Purpose.CLIENT_AUTH)
158 ctx.options &= ~ssl.OP_NO_SSLv3
159
160 .. versionadded:: 3.4
161
162 .. versionchanged:: 3.4.4
163
164 RC4 was dropped from the default cipher string.
165
166 .. versionchanged:: 3.6
167
168 ChaCha20/Poly1305 was added to the default cipher string.
169
170 3DES was dropped from the default cipher string.
171
172 .. versionchanged:: 3.7
173
174 TLS 1.3 cipher suites TLS_AES_128_GCM_SHA256, TLS_AES_256_GCM_SHA384,
175 and TLS_CHACHA20_POLY1305_SHA256 were added to the default cipher string.
176
177
178Exceptions
179^^^^^^^^^^
180
Thomas Wouters1b7f8912007-09-19 03:06:30 +0000181.. exception:: SSLError
182
Antoine Pitrou59fdd672010-10-08 10:37:08 +0000183 Raised to signal an error from the underlying SSL implementation
184 (currently provided by the OpenSSL library). This signifies some
185 problem in the higher-level encryption and authentication layer that's
186 superimposed on the underlying network connection. This error
Antoine Pitrou5574c302011-10-12 17:53:43 +0200187 is a subtype of :exc:`OSError`. The error code and message of
188 :exc:`SSLError` instances are provided by the OpenSSL library.
189
190 .. versionchanged:: 3.3
191 :exc:`SSLError` used to be a subtype of :exc:`socket.error`.
Antoine Pitrou59fdd672010-10-08 10:37:08 +0000192
Antoine Pitrou3b36fb12012-06-22 21:11:52 +0200193 .. attribute:: library
194
195 A string mnemonic designating the OpenSSL submodule in which the error
196 occurred, such as ``SSL``, ``PEM`` or ``X509``. The range of possible
197 values depends on the OpenSSL version.
198
199 .. versionadded:: 3.3
200
201 .. attribute:: reason
202
203 A string mnemonic designating the reason this error occurred, for
204 example ``CERTIFICATE_VERIFY_FAILED``. The range of possible
205 values depends on the OpenSSL version.
206
207 .. versionadded:: 3.3
208
Antoine Pitrou41032a62011-10-27 23:56:55 +0200209.. exception:: SSLZeroReturnError
210
211 A subclass of :exc:`SSLError` raised when trying to read or write and
212 the SSL connection has been closed cleanly. Note that this doesn't
213 mean that the underlying transport (read TCP) has been closed.
214
215 .. versionadded:: 3.3
216
217.. exception:: SSLWantReadError
218
219 A subclass of :exc:`SSLError` raised by a :ref:`non-blocking SSL socket
220 <ssl-nonblocking>` when trying to read or write data, but more data needs
221 to be received on the underlying TCP transport before the request can be
222 fulfilled.
223
224 .. versionadded:: 3.3
225
226.. exception:: SSLWantWriteError
227
228 A subclass of :exc:`SSLError` raised by a :ref:`non-blocking SSL socket
229 <ssl-nonblocking>` when trying to read or write data, but more data needs
230 to be sent on the underlying TCP transport before the request can be
231 fulfilled.
232
233 .. versionadded:: 3.3
234
235.. exception:: SSLSyscallError
236
237 A subclass of :exc:`SSLError` raised when a system error was encountered
238 while trying to fulfill an operation on a SSL socket. Unfortunately,
239 there is no easy way to inspect the original errno number.
240
241 .. versionadded:: 3.3
242
243.. exception:: SSLEOFError
244
245 A subclass of :exc:`SSLError` raised when the SSL connection has been
Antoine Pitrouf3dc2d72011-10-28 00:01:03 +0200246 terminated abruptly. Generally, you shouldn't try to reuse the underlying
Antoine Pitrou41032a62011-10-27 23:56:55 +0200247 transport when this error is encountered.
248
249 .. versionadded:: 3.3
250
Christian Heimesb3ad0e52017-09-08 12:00:19 -0700251.. exception:: SSLCertVerificationError
252
253 A subclass of :exc:`SSLError` raised when certificate validation has
254 failed.
255
256 .. versionadded:: 3.7
257
258 .. attribute:: verify_code
259
260 A numeric error number that denotes the verification error.
261
262 .. attribute:: verify_message
263
264 A human readable string of the verification error.
265
Antoine Pitrou59fdd672010-10-08 10:37:08 +0000266.. exception:: CertificateError
267
Christian Heimes61d478c2018-01-27 15:51:38 +0100268 An alias for :exc:`SSLCertVerificationError`.
269
270 .. versionchanged:: 3.7
271 The exception is now an alias for :exc:`SSLCertVerificationError`.
Antoine Pitrou59fdd672010-10-08 10:37:08 +0000272
273
Antoine Pitrou59fdd672010-10-08 10:37:08 +0000274Random generation
275^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
276
Victor Stinner99c8b162011-05-24 12:05:19 +0200277.. function:: RAND_bytes(num)
278
Benjamin Peterson1c69c3e2015-04-11 07:42:42 -0400279 Return *num* cryptographically strong pseudo-random bytes. Raises an
Victor Stinnera6752062011-05-25 11:27:40 +0200280 :class:`SSLError` if the PRNG has not been seeded with enough data or if the
281 operation is not supported by the current RAND method. :func:`RAND_status`
282 can be used to check the status of the PRNG and :func:`RAND_add` can be used
283 to seed the PRNG.
Victor Stinner99c8b162011-05-24 12:05:19 +0200284
Berker Peksageb7a97c2015-04-10 16:19:13 +0300285 For almost all applications :func:`os.urandom` is preferable.
286
Victor Stinner19fb53c2011-05-24 21:32:40 +0200287 Read the Wikipedia article, `Cryptographically secure pseudorandom number
Victor Stinnera6752062011-05-25 11:27:40 +0200288 generator (CSPRNG)
Georg Brandl5d941342016-02-26 19:37:12 +0100289 <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cryptographically_secure_pseudorandom_number_generator>`_,
Victor Stinner19fb53c2011-05-24 21:32:40 +0200290 to get the requirements of a cryptographically generator.
291
Victor Stinner99c8b162011-05-24 12:05:19 +0200292 .. versionadded:: 3.3
293
294.. function:: RAND_pseudo_bytes(num)
295
Benjamin Peterson1c69c3e2015-04-11 07:42:42 -0400296 Return (bytes, is_cryptographic): bytes are *num* pseudo-random bytes,
Serhiy Storchakafbc1c262013-11-29 12:17:13 +0200297 is_cryptographic is ``True`` if the bytes generated are cryptographically
Victor Stinnera6752062011-05-25 11:27:40 +0200298 strong. Raises an :class:`SSLError` if the operation is not supported by the
299 current RAND method.
Victor Stinner99c8b162011-05-24 12:05:19 +0200300
Victor Stinner19fb53c2011-05-24 21:32:40 +0200301 Generated pseudo-random byte sequences will be unique if they are of
302 sufficient length, but are not necessarily unpredictable. They can be used
303 for non-cryptographic purposes and for certain purposes in cryptographic
304 protocols, but usually not for key generation etc.
305
Berker Peksageb7a97c2015-04-10 16:19:13 +0300306 For almost all applications :func:`os.urandom` is preferable.
307
Victor Stinner99c8b162011-05-24 12:05:19 +0200308 .. versionadded:: 3.3
309
Christian Heimes01113fa2016-09-05 23:23:24 +0200310 .. deprecated:: 3.6
Christian Heimes598894f2016-09-05 23:19:05 +0200311
312 OpenSSL has deprecated :func:`ssl.RAND_pseudo_bytes`, use
313 :func:`ssl.RAND_bytes` instead.
314
Thomas Wouters1b7f8912007-09-19 03:06:30 +0000315.. function:: RAND_status()
316
Benjamin Peterson1c69c3e2015-04-11 07:42:42 -0400317 Return ``True`` if the SSL pseudo-random number generator has been seeded
318 with 'enough' randomness, and ``False`` otherwise. You can use
319 :func:`ssl.RAND_egd` and :func:`ssl.RAND_add` to increase the randomness of
320 the pseudo-random number generator.
Thomas Wouters1b7f8912007-09-19 03:06:30 +0000321
322.. function:: RAND_egd(path)
323
Victor Stinner99c8b162011-05-24 12:05:19 +0200324 If you are running an entropy-gathering daemon (EGD) somewhere, and *path*
Georg Brandl7f01a132009-09-16 15:58:14 +0000325 is the pathname of a socket connection open to it, this will read 256 bytes
326 of randomness from the socket, and add it to the SSL pseudo-random number
327 generator to increase the security of generated secret keys. This is
328 typically only necessary on systems without better sources of randomness.
Thomas Wouters1b7f8912007-09-19 03:06:30 +0000329
Georg Brandl7f01a132009-09-16 15:58:14 +0000330 See http://egd.sourceforge.net/ or http://prngd.sourceforge.net/ for sources
331 of entropy-gathering daemons.
Thomas Wouters1b7f8912007-09-19 03:06:30 +0000332
Christian Heimes598894f2016-09-05 23:19:05 +0200333 Availability: not available with LibreSSL and OpenSSL > 1.1.0
Victor Stinner3ce67a92015-01-06 13:53:09 +0100334
Thomas Wouters1b7f8912007-09-19 03:06:30 +0000335.. function:: RAND_add(bytes, entropy)
336
Benjamin Peterson1c69c3e2015-04-11 07:42:42 -0400337 Mix the given *bytes* into the SSL pseudo-random number generator. The
Victor Stinner99c8b162011-05-24 12:05:19 +0200338 parameter *entropy* (a float) is a lower bound on the entropy contained in
Georg Brandl7f01a132009-09-16 15:58:14 +0000339 string (so you can always use :const:`0.0`). See :rfc:`1750` for more
340 information on sources of entropy.
Thomas Woutersed03b412007-08-28 21:37:11 +0000341
Georg Brandl8c16cb92016-02-25 20:17:45 +0100342 .. versionchanged:: 3.5
Serhiy Storchaka8490f5a2015-03-20 09:00:36 +0200343 Writable :term:`bytes-like object` is now accepted.
344
Antoine Pitrou59fdd672010-10-08 10:37:08 +0000345Certificate handling
346^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
347
Marco Buttu7b2491a2017-04-13 16:17:59 +0200348.. testsetup::
349
350 import ssl
351
Antoine Pitrou59fdd672010-10-08 10:37:08 +0000352.. function:: match_hostname(cert, hostname)
353
354 Verify that *cert* (in decoded format as returned by
355 :meth:`SSLSocket.getpeercert`) matches the given *hostname*. The rules
356 applied are those for checking the identity of HTTPS servers as outlined
Chandan Kumar63c2c8a2017-06-09 15:13:58 +0530357 in :rfc:`2818`, :rfc:`5280` and :rfc:`6125`. In addition to HTTPS, this
358 function should be suitable for checking the identity of servers in
359 various SSL-based protocols such as FTPS, IMAPS, POPS and others.
Antoine Pitrou59fdd672010-10-08 10:37:08 +0000360
361 :exc:`CertificateError` is raised on failure. On success, the function
362 returns nothing::
363
364 >>> cert = {'subject': ((('commonName', 'example.com'),),)}
365 >>> ssl.match_hostname(cert, "example.com")
366 >>> ssl.match_hostname(cert, "example.org")
367 Traceback (most recent call last):
368 File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
369 File "/home/py3k/Lib/ssl.py", line 130, in match_hostname
370 ssl.CertificateError: hostname 'example.org' doesn't match 'example.com'
371
372 .. versionadded:: 3.2
373
Georg Brandl72c98d32013-10-27 07:16:53 +0100374 .. versionchanged:: 3.3.3
375 The function now follows :rfc:`6125`, section 6.4.3 and does neither
376 match multiple wildcards (e.g. ``*.*.com`` or ``*a*.example.org``) nor
377 a wildcard inside an internationalized domain names (IDN) fragment.
378 IDN A-labels such as ``www*.xn--pthon-kva.org`` are still supported,
379 but ``x*.python.org`` no longer matches ``xn--tda.python.org``.
380
Antoine Pitrouc481bfb2015-02-15 18:12:20 +0100381 .. versionchanged:: 3.5
382 Matching of IP addresses, when present in the subjectAltName field
383 of the certificate, is now supported.
384
Mandeep Singhede2ac92017-11-27 04:01:27 +0530385 .. versionchanged:: 3.7
Christian Heimes61d478c2018-01-27 15:51:38 +0100386 The function is no longer used to TLS connections. Hostname matching
387 is now performed by OpenSSL.
388
Mandeep Singhede2ac92017-11-27 04:01:27 +0530389 Allow wildcard when it is the leftmost and the only character
Christian Heimes61d478c2018-01-27 15:51:38 +0100390 in that segment. Partial wildcards like ``www*.example.com`` are no
391 longer supported.
392
393 .. deprecated:: 3.7
Mandeep Singhede2ac92017-11-27 04:01:27 +0530394
Antoine Pitrouc695c952014-04-28 20:57:36 +0200395.. function:: cert_time_to_seconds(cert_time)
Thomas Woutersed03b412007-08-28 21:37:11 +0000396
Antoine Pitrouc695c952014-04-28 20:57:36 +0200397 Return the time in seconds since the Epoch, given the ``cert_time``
398 string representing the "notBefore" or "notAfter" date from a
399 certificate in ``"%b %d %H:%M:%S %Y %Z"`` strptime format (C
400 locale).
Thomas Woutersed03b412007-08-28 21:37:11 +0000401
Antoine Pitrouc695c952014-04-28 20:57:36 +0200402 Here's an example:
Thomas Woutersed03b412007-08-28 21:37:11 +0000403
Antoine Pitrouc695c952014-04-28 20:57:36 +0200404 .. doctest:: newcontext
405
406 >>> import ssl
407 >>> timestamp = ssl.cert_time_to_seconds("Jan 5 09:34:43 2018 GMT")
Marco Buttu7b2491a2017-04-13 16:17:59 +0200408 >>> timestamp # doctest: +SKIP
Antoine Pitrouc695c952014-04-28 20:57:36 +0200409 1515144883
410 >>> from datetime import datetime
Marco Buttu7b2491a2017-04-13 16:17:59 +0200411 >>> print(datetime.utcfromtimestamp(timestamp)) # doctest: +SKIP
Antoine Pitrouc695c952014-04-28 20:57:36 +0200412 2018-01-05 09:34:43
413
414 "notBefore" or "notAfter" dates must use GMT (:rfc:`5280`).
415
416 .. versionchanged:: 3.5
417 Interpret the input time as a time in UTC as specified by 'GMT'
418 timezone in the input string. Local timezone was used
419 previously. Return an integer (no fractions of a second in the
420 input format)
Thomas Woutersed03b412007-08-28 21:37:11 +0000421
Christian Heimes598894f2016-09-05 23:19:05 +0200422.. function:: get_server_certificate(addr, ssl_version=PROTOCOL_TLS, ca_certs=None)
Thomas Woutersed03b412007-08-28 21:37:11 +0000423
Georg Brandl7f01a132009-09-16 15:58:14 +0000424 Given the address ``addr`` of an SSL-protected server, as a (*hostname*,
425 *port-number*) pair, fetches the server's certificate, and returns it as a
426 PEM-encoded string. If ``ssl_version`` is specified, uses that version of
427 the SSL protocol to attempt to connect to the server. If ``ca_certs`` is
428 specified, it should be a file containing a list of root certificates, the
Christian Heimes90f05a52018-02-27 09:21:34 +0100429 same format as used for the same parameter in
430 :meth:`SSLContext.wrap_socket`. The call will attempt to validate the
431 server certificate against that set of root certificates, and will fail
432 if the validation attempt fails.
Thomas Wouters1b7f8912007-09-19 03:06:30 +0000433
Antoine Pitrou15399c32011-04-28 19:23:55 +0200434 .. versionchanged:: 3.3
435 This function is now IPv6-compatible.
436
Antoine Pitrou94a5b662014-04-16 18:56:28 +0200437 .. versionchanged:: 3.5
438 The default *ssl_version* is changed from :data:`PROTOCOL_SSLv3` to
Christian Heimes598894f2016-09-05 23:19:05 +0200439 :data:`PROTOCOL_TLS` for maximum compatibility with modern servers.
Antoine Pitrou94a5b662014-04-16 18:56:28 +0200440
Georg Brandl7f01a132009-09-16 15:58:14 +0000441.. function:: DER_cert_to_PEM_cert(DER_cert_bytes)
Thomas Wouters1b7f8912007-09-19 03:06:30 +0000442
443 Given a certificate as a DER-encoded blob of bytes, returns a PEM-encoded
444 string version of the same certificate.
445
Georg Brandl7f01a132009-09-16 15:58:14 +0000446.. function:: PEM_cert_to_DER_cert(PEM_cert_string)
Thomas Wouters1b7f8912007-09-19 03:06:30 +0000447
Georg Brandl7f01a132009-09-16 15:58:14 +0000448 Given a certificate as an ASCII PEM string, returns a DER-encoded sequence of
449 bytes for that same certificate.
Thomas Woutersed03b412007-08-28 21:37:11 +0000450
Christian Heimes6d7ad132013-06-09 18:02:55 +0200451.. function:: get_default_verify_paths()
452
453 Returns a named tuple with paths to OpenSSL's default cafile and capath.
454 The paths are the same as used by
455 :meth:`SSLContext.set_default_verify_paths`. The return value is a
456 :term:`named tuple` ``DefaultVerifyPaths``:
457
Serhiy Storchakaecf41da2016-10-19 16:29:26 +0300458 * :attr:`cafile` - resolved path to cafile or ``None`` if the file doesn't exist,
459 * :attr:`capath` - resolved path to capath or ``None`` if the directory doesn't exist,
Christian Heimes6d7ad132013-06-09 18:02:55 +0200460 * :attr:`openssl_cafile_env` - OpenSSL's environment key that points to a cafile,
461 * :attr:`openssl_cafile` - hard coded path to a cafile,
462 * :attr:`openssl_capath_env` - OpenSSL's environment key that points to a capath,
463 * :attr:`openssl_capath` - hard coded path to a capath directory
464
Christian Heimes598894f2016-09-05 23:19:05 +0200465 Availability: LibreSSL ignores the environment vars
466 :attr:`openssl_cafile_env` and :attr:`openssl_capath_env`
467
Christian Heimes6d7ad132013-06-09 18:02:55 +0200468 .. versionadded:: 3.4
469
Christian Heimes44109d72013-11-22 01:51:30 +0100470.. function:: enum_certificates(store_name)
Christian Heimes46bebee2013-06-09 19:03:31 +0200471
472 Retrieve certificates from Windows' system cert store. *store_name* may be
473 one of ``CA``, ``ROOT`` or ``MY``. Windows may provide additional cert
Christian Heimes44109d72013-11-22 01:51:30 +0100474 stores, too.
Christian Heimes46bebee2013-06-09 19:03:31 +0200475
Christian Heimes44109d72013-11-22 01:51:30 +0100476 The function returns a list of (cert_bytes, encoding_type, trust) tuples.
477 The encoding_type specifies the encoding of cert_bytes. It is either
478 :const:`x509_asn` for X.509 ASN.1 data or :const:`pkcs_7_asn` for
479 PKCS#7 ASN.1 data. Trust specifies the purpose of the certificate as a set
480 of OIDS or exactly ``True`` if the certificate is trustworthy for all
481 purposes.
482
483 Example::
484
485 >>> ssl.enum_certificates("CA")
486 [(b'data...', 'x509_asn', {'1.3.6.1.5.5.7.3.1', '1.3.6.1.5.5.7.3.2'}),
487 (b'data...', 'x509_asn', True)]
Christian Heimes46bebee2013-06-09 19:03:31 +0200488
489 Availability: Windows.
490
491 .. versionadded:: 3.4
Christian Heimes6d7ad132013-06-09 18:02:55 +0200492
Christian Heimes44109d72013-11-22 01:51:30 +0100493.. function:: enum_crls(store_name)
494
495 Retrieve CRLs from Windows' system cert store. *store_name* may be
496 one of ``CA``, ``ROOT`` or ``MY``. Windows may provide additional cert
497 stores, too.
498
499 The function returns a list of (cert_bytes, encoding_type, trust) tuples.
500 The encoding_type specifies the encoding of cert_bytes. It is either
501 :const:`x509_asn` for X.509 ASN.1 data or :const:`pkcs_7_asn` for
502 PKCS#7 ASN.1 data.
503
504 Availability: Windows.
505
506 .. versionadded:: 3.4
507
Christian Heimes90f05a52018-02-27 09:21:34 +0100508.. function:: wrap_socket(sock, keyfile=None, certfile=None, \
509 server_side=False, cert_reqs=CERT_NONE, ssl_version=PROTOCOL_TLS, \
510 ca_certs=None, do_handshake_on_connect=True, \
511 suppress_ragged_eofs=True, ciphers=None)
512
513 Takes an instance ``sock`` of :class:`socket.socket`, and returns an instance
514 of :class:`ssl.SSLSocket`, a subtype of :class:`socket.socket`, which wraps
515 the underlying socket in an SSL context. ``sock`` must be a
516 :data:`~socket.SOCK_STREAM` socket; other socket types are unsupported.
517
518 Internally, function creates a :class:`SSLContext` with protocol
519 *ssl_version* and :attr:`SSLContext.options` set to *cert_reqs*. If
520 parameters *keyfile*, *certfile*, *ca_certs* or *ciphers* are set, then
521 the values are passed to :meth:`SSLContext.load_cert_chain`,
522 :meth:`SSLContext.load_verify_locations`, and
523 :meth:`SSLContext.set_ciphers`.
524
525 The arguments *server_side*, *do_handshake_on_connect*, and
526 *suppress_ragged_eofs* have the same meaning as
527 :meth:`SSLContext.wrap_socket`.
528
529 .. deprecated:: 3.7
530
531 Since Python 3.2 and 2.7.9, it is recommended to use the
532 :meth:`SSLContext.wrap_socket` instead of :func:`wrap_socket`. The
533 top-level function is limited and creates an insecure client socket
534 without server name indication or hostname matching.
Christian Heimes44109d72013-11-22 01:51:30 +0100535
Antoine Pitrou59fdd672010-10-08 10:37:08 +0000536Constants
537^^^^^^^^^
538
Christian Heimes3aeacad2016-09-10 00:19:35 +0200539 All constants are now :class:`enum.IntEnum` or :class:`enum.IntFlag` collections.
540
541 .. versionadded:: 3.6
542
Thomas Woutersed03b412007-08-28 21:37:11 +0000543.. data:: CERT_NONE
544
Antoine Pitrou152efa22010-05-16 18:19:27 +0000545 Possible value for :attr:`SSLContext.verify_mode`, or the ``cert_reqs``
546 parameter to :func:`wrap_socket`. In this mode (the default), no
547 certificates will be required from the other side of the socket connection.
548 If a certificate is received from the other end, no attempt to validate it
549 is made.
550
551 See the discussion of :ref:`ssl-security` below.
Thomas Woutersed03b412007-08-28 21:37:11 +0000552
553.. data:: CERT_OPTIONAL
554
Antoine Pitrou152efa22010-05-16 18:19:27 +0000555 Possible value for :attr:`SSLContext.verify_mode`, or the ``cert_reqs``
556 parameter to :func:`wrap_socket`. In this mode no certificates will be
557 required from the other side of the socket connection; but if they
558 are provided, validation will be attempted and an :class:`SSLError`
559 will be raised on failure.
560
561 Use of this setting requires a valid set of CA certificates to
562 be passed, either to :meth:`SSLContext.load_verify_locations` or as a
563 value of the ``ca_certs`` parameter to :func:`wrap_socket`.
Thomas Woutersed03b412007-08-28 21:37:11 +0000564
565.. data:: CERT_REQUIRED
566
Antoine Pitrou152efa22010-05-16 18:19:27 +0000567 Possible value for :attr:`SSLContext.verify_mode`, or the ``cert_reqs``
568 parameter to :func:`wrap_socket`. In this mode, certificates are
569 required from the other side of the socket connection; an :class:`SSLError`
570 will be raised if no certificate is provided, or if its validation fails.
571
572 Use of this setting requires a valid set of CA certificates to
573 be passed, either to :meth:`SSLContext.load_verify_locations` or as a
574 value of the ``ca_certs`` parameter to :func:`wrap_socket`.
Thomas Woutersed03b412007-08-28 21:37:11 +0000575
Christian Heimes3aeacad2016-09-10 00:19:35 +0200576.. class:: VerifyMode
577
578 :class:`enum.IntEnum` collection of CERT_* constants.
579
580 .. versionadded:: 3.6
581
Christian Heimes22587792013-11-21 23:56:13 +0100582.. data:: VERIFY_DEFAULT
583
Benjamin Peterson990fcaa2015-03-04 22:49:41 -0500584 Possible value for :attr:`SSLContext.verify_flags`. In this mode, certificate
585 revocation lists (CRLs) are not checked. By default OpenSSL does neither
586 require nor verify CRLs.
Christian Heimes22587792013-11-21 23:56:13 +0100587
588 .. versionadded:: 3.4
589
590.. data:: VERIFY_CRL_CHECK_LEAF
591
592 Possible value for :attr:`SSLContext.verify_flags`. In this mode, only the
593 peer cert is check but non of the intermediate CA certificates. The mode
594 requires a valid CRL that is signed by the peer cert's issuer (its direct
595 ancestor CA). If no proper has been loaded
596 :attr:`SSLContext.load_verify_locations`, validation will fail.
597
598 .. versionadded:: 3.4
599
600.. data:: VERIFY_CRL_CHECK_CHAIN
601
602 Possible value for :attr:`SSLContext.verify_flags`. In this mode, CRLs of
603 all certificates in the peer cert chain are checked.
604
605 .. versionadded:: 3.4
606
607.. data:: VERIFY_X509_STRICT
608
609 Possible value for :attr:`SSLContext.verify_flags` to disable workarounds
610 for broken X.509 certificates.
611
612 .. versionadded:: 3.4
613
Benjamin Peterson990fcaa2015-03-04 22:49:41 -0500614.. data:: VERIFY_X509_TRUSTED_FIRST
615
616 Possible value for :attr:`SSLContext.verify_flags`. It instructs OpenSSL to
617 prefer trusted certificates when building the trust chain to validate a
618 certificate. This flag is enabled by default.
619
Benjamin Petersonc8358272015-03-08 09:42:25 -0400620 .. versionadded:: 3.4.4
Benjamin Peterson990fcaa2015-03-04 22:49:41 -0500621
Christian Heimes3aeacad2016-09-10 00:19:35 +0200622.. class:: VerifyFlags
623
624 :class:`enum.IntFlag` collection of VERIFY_* constants.
625
626 .. versionadded:: 3.6
627
Christian Heimes598894f2016-09-05 23:19:05 +0200628.. data:: PROTOCOL_TLS
Antoine Pitrou4b4ddb22014-10-21 00:14:39 +0200629
630 Selects the highest protocol version that both the client and server support.
Nathaniel J. Smithd4069de2017-05-01 22:43:31 -0700631 Despite the name, this option can select both "SSL" and "TLS" protocols.
Antoine Pitrou4b4ddb22014-10-21 00:14:39 +0200632
Christian Heimes01113fa2016-09-05 23:23:24 +0200633 .. versionadded:: 3.6
Christian Heimes598894f2016-09-05 23:19:05 +0200634
Christian Heimes5fe668c2016-09-12 00:01:11 +0200635.. data:: PROTOCOL_TLS_CLIENT
636
Nathaniel J. Smithd4069de2017-05-01 22:43:31 -0700637 Auto-negotiate the highest protocol version like :data:`PROTOCOL_TLS`,
Christian Heimes5fe668c2016-09-12 00:01:11 +0200638 but only support client-side :class:`SSLSocket` connections. The protocol
639 enables :data:`CERT_REQUIRED` and :attr:`~SSLContext.check_hostname` by
640 default.
641
642 .. versionadded:: 3.6
643
644.. data:: PROTOCOL_TLS_SERVER
645
Nathaniel J. Smithd4069de2017-05-01 22:43:31 -0700646 Auto-negotiate the highest protocol version like :data:`PROTOCOL_TLS`,
Christian Heimes5fe668c2016-09-12 00:01:11 +0200647 but only support server-side :class:`SSLSocket` connections.
648
649 .. versionadded:: 3.6
650
Christian Heimes598894f2016-09-05 23:19:05 +0200651.. data:: PROTOCOL_SSLv23
652
653 Alias for data:`PROTOCOL_TLS`.
654
Christian Heimes01113fa2016-09-05 23:23:24 +0200655 .. deprecated:: 3.6
Christian Heimes598894f2016-09-05 23:19:05 +0200656
Berker Peksagd93c4de2017-02-06 13:37:19 +0300657 Use :data:`PROTOCOL_TLS` instead.
Christian Heimes598894f2016-09-05 23:19:05 +0200658
Thomas Woutersed03b412007-08-28 21:37:11 +0000659.. data:: PROTOCOL_SSLv2
660
661 Selects SSL version 2 as the channel encryption protocol.
662
Benjamin Petersonb92fd012014-12-06 11:36:32 -0500663 This protocol is not available if OpenSSL is compiled with the
664 ``OPENSSL_NO_SSL2`` flag.
Victor Stinner3de49192011-05-09 00:42:58 +0200665
Antoine Pitrou8eac60d2010-05-16 14:19:41 +0000666 .. warning::
667
668 SSL version 2 is insecure. Its use is highly discouraged.
669
Christian Heimes01113fa2016-09-05 23:23:24 +0200670 .. deprecated:: 3.6
Christian Heimes598894f2016-09-05 23:19:05 +0200671
672 OpenSSL has removed support for SSLv2.
673
Thomas Woutersed03b412007-08-28 21:37:11 +0000674.. data:: PROTOCOL_SSLv3
675
Antoine Pitrou4b4ddb22014-10-21 00:14:39 +0200676 Selects SSL version 3 as the channel encryption protocol.
677
Benjamin Petersonb92fd012014-12-06 11:36:32 -0500678 This protocol is not be available if OpenSSL is compiled with the
679 ``OPENSSL_NO_SSLv3`` flag.
680
Antoine Pitrou4b4ddb22014-10-21 00:14:39 +0200681 .. warning::
682
683 SSL version 3 is insecure. Its use is highly discouraged.
Thomas Woutersed03b412007-08-28 21:37:11 +0000684
Christian Heimes01113fa2016-09-05 23:23:24 +0200685 .. deprecated:: 3.6
Christian Heimes598894f2016-09-05 23:19:05 +0200686
687 OpenSSL has deprecated all version specific protocols. Use the default
Berker Peksagd93c4de2017-02-06 13:37:19 +0300688 protocol :data:`PROTOCOL_TLS` with flags like :data:`OP_NO_SSLv3` instead.
Christian Heimes598894f2016-09-05 23:19:05 +0200689
Thomas Woutersed03b412007-08-28 21:37:11 +0000690.. data:: PROTOCOL_TLSv1
691
Antoine Pitrou2463e5f2013-03-28 22:24:43 +0100692 Selects TLS version 1.0 as the channel encryption protocol.
693
Christian Heimes01113fa2016-09-05 23:23:24 +0200694 .. deprecated:: 3.6
Christian Heimes598894f2016-09-05 23:19:05 +0200695
696 OpenSSL has deprecated all version specific protocols. Use the default
Berker Peksagd93c4de2017-02-06 13:37:19 +0300697 protocol :data:`PROTOCOL_TLS` with flags like :data:`OP_NO_SSLv3` instead.
Christian Heimes598894f2016-09-05 23:19:05 +0200698
Antoine Pitrou2463e5f2013-03-28 22:24:43 +0100699.. data:: PROTOCOL_TLSv1_1
700
Antoine Pitrou2463e5f2013-03-28 22:24:43 +0100701 Selects TLS version 1.1 as the channel encryption protocol.
702 Available only with openssl version 1.0.1+.
703
704 .. versionadded:: 3.4
705
Christian Heimes01113fa2016-09-05 23:23:24 +0200706 .. deprecated:: 3.6
Christian Heimes598894f2016-09-05 23:19:05 +0200707
708 OpenSSL has deprecated all version specific protocols. Use the default
Berker Peksagd93c4de2017-02-06 13:37:19 +0300709 protocol :data:`PROTOCOL_TLS` with flags like :data:`OP_NO_SSLv3` instead.
Christian Heimes598894f2016-09-05 23:19:05 +0200710
Antoine Pitrou2463e5f2013-03-28 22:24:43 +0100711.. data:: PROTOCOL_TLSv1_2
712
Antoine Pitrou4b4ddb22014-10-21 00:14:39 +0200713 Selects TLS version 1.2 as the channel encryption protocol. This is the
714 most modern version, and probably the best choice for maximum protection,
715 if both sides can speak it. Available only with openssl version 1.0.1+.
Antoine Pitrou2463e5f2013-03-28 22:24:43 +0100716
717 .. versionadded:: 3.4
Thomas Woutersed03b412007-08-28 21:37:11 +0000718
Christian Heimes01113fa2016-09-05 23:23:24 +0200719 .. deprecated:: 3.6
Christian Heimes598894f2016-09-05 23:19:05 +0200720
721 OpenSSL has deprecated all version specific protocols. Use the default
Berker Peksagd93c4de2017-02-06 13:37:19 +0300722 protocol :data:`PROTOCOL_TLS` with flags like :data:`OP_NO_SSLv3` instead.
Christian Heimes598894f2016-09-05 23:19:05 +0200723
Antoine Pitroub5218772010-05-21 09:56:06 +0000724.. data:: OP_ALL
725
726 Enables workarounds for various bugs present in other SSL implementations.
Antoine Pitrou9f6b02e2012-01-27 10:02:55 +0100727 This option is set by default. It does not necessarily set the same
728 flags as OpenSSL's ``SSL_OP_ALL`` constant.
Antoine Pitroub5218772010-05-21 09:56:06 +0000729
730 .. versionadded:: 3.2
731
732.. data:: OP_NO_SSLv2
733
734 Prevents an SSLv2 connection. This option is only applicable in
Christian Heimes598894f2016-09-05 23:19:05 +0200735 conjunction with :const:`PROTOCOL_TLS`. It prevents the peers from
Antoine Pitroub5218772010-05-21 09:56:06 +0000736 choosing SSLv2 as the protocol version.
737
738 .. versionadded:: 3.2
739
Christian Heimes01113fa2016-09-05 23:23:24 +0200740 .. deprecated:: 3.6
Christian Heimes598894f2016-09-05 23:19:05 +0200741
742 SSLv2 is deprecated
743
744
Antoine Pitroub5218772010-05-21 09:56:06 +0000745.. data:: OP_NO_SSLv3
746
747 Prevents an SSLv3 connection. This option is only applicable in
Christian Heimes598894f2016-09-05 23:19:05 +0200748 conjunction with :const:`PROTOCOL_TLS`. It prevents the peers from
Antoine Pitroub5218772010-05-21 09:56:06 +0000749 choosing SSLv3 as the protocol version.
750
751 .. versionadded:: 3.2
752
Christian Heimes01113fa2016-09-05 23:23:24 +0200753 .. deprecated:: 3.6
Christian Heimes598894f2016-09-05 23:19:05 +0200754
755 SSLv3 is deprecated
756
Antoine Pitroub5218772010-05-21 09:56:06 +0000757.. data:: OP_NO_TLSv1
758
759 Prevents a TLSv1 connection. This option is only applicable in
Christian Heimes598894f2016-09-05 23:19:05 +0200760 conjunction with :const:`PROTOCOL_TLS`. It prevents the peers from
Antoine Pitroub5218772010-05-21 09:56:06 +0000761 choosing TLSv1 as the protocol version.
762
763 .. versionadded:: 3.2
764
Christian Heimes698dde12018-02-27 11:54:43 +0100765 .. deprecated:: 3.7
766 The option is deprecated since OpenSSL 1.1.0, use the new
767 :attr:`SSLContext.minimum_version` and
768 :attr:`SSLContext.maximum_version` instead.
769
Antoine Pitrou2463e5f2013-03-28 22:24:43 +0100770.. data:: OP_NO_TLSv1_1
771
772 Prevents a TLSv1.1 connection. This option is only applicable in conjunction
Christian Heimes598894f2016-09-05 23:19:05 +0200773 with :const:`PROTOCOL_TLS`. It prevents the peers from choosing TLSv1.1 as
Antoine Pitrou2463e5f2013-03-28 22:24:43 +0100774 the protocol version. Available only with openssl version 1.0.1+.
775
776 .. versionadded:: 3.4
777
Christian Heimes698dde12018-02-27 11:54:43 +0100778 .. deprecated:: 3.7
779 The option is deprecated since OpenSSL 1.1.0.
780
Antoine Pitrou2463e5f2013-03-28 22:24:43 +0100781.. data:: OP_NO_TLSv1_2
782
783 Prevents a TLSv1.2 connection. This option is only applicable in conjunction
Christian Heimes598894f2016-09-05 23:19:05 +0200784 with :const:`PROTOCOL_TLS`. It prevents the peers from choosing TLSv1.2 as
Antoine Pitrou2463e5f2013-03-28 22:24:43 +0100785 the protocol version. Available only with openssl version 1.0.1+.
786
787 .. versionadded:: 3.4
788
Christian Heimes698dde12018-02-27 11:54:43 +0100789 .. deprecated:: 3.7
790 The option is deprecated since OpenSSL 1.1.0.
791
Christian Heimescb5b68a2017-09-07 18:07:00 -0700792.. data:: OP_NO_TLSv1_3
793
794 Prevents a TLSv1.3 connection. This option is only applicable in conjunction
795 with :const:`PROTOCOL_TLS`. It prevents the peers from choosing TLSv1.3 as
796 the protocol version. TLS 1.3 is available with OpenSSL 1.1.1 or later.
797 When Python has been compiled against an older version of OpenSSL, the
798 flag defaults to *0*.
799
800 .. versionadded:: 3.7
801
Christian Heimes698dde12018-02-27 11:54:43 +0100802 .. deprecated:: 3.7
803 The option is deprecated since OpenSSL 1.1.0. It was added to 2.7.15,
804 3.6.3 and 3.7.0 for backwards compatibility with OpenSSL 1.0.2.
805
Christian Heimes67c48012018-05-15 16:25:40 -0400806.. data:: OP_NO_RENEGOTIATION
807
808 Disable all renegotiation in TLSv1.2 and earlier. Do not send
809 HelloRequest messages, and ignore renegotiation requests via ClientHello.
810
811 This option is only available with OpenSSL 1.1.0h and later.
812
813 .. versionadded:: 3.7
814
Antoine Pitrou6db49442011-12-19 13:27:11 +0100815.. data:: OP_CIPHER_SERVER_PREFERENCE
816
817 Use the server's cipher ordering preference, rather than the client's.
818 This option has no effect on client sockets and SSLv2 server sockets.
819
820 .. versionadded:: 3.3
821
Antoine Pitrou0e576f12011-12-22 10:03:38 +0100822.. data:: OP_SINGLE_DH_USE
823
824 Prevents re-use of the same DH key for distinct SSL sessions. This
825 improves forward secrecy but requires more computational resources.
826 This option only applies to server sockets.
827
828 .. versionadded:: 3.3
829
Antoine Pitrou923df6f2011-12-19 17:16:51 +0100830.. data:: OP_SINGLE_ECDH_USE
831
Antoine Pitrou0e576f12011-12-22 10:03:38 +0100832 Prevents re-use of the same ECDH key for distinct SSL sessions. This
Antoine Pitrou923df6f2011-12-19 17:16:51 +0100833 improves forward secrecy but requires more computational resources.
834 This option only applies to server sockets.
835
836 .. versionadded:: 3.3
837
Christian Heimes05d9fe32018-02-27 08:55:39 +0100838.. data:: OP_ENABLE_MIDDLEBOX_COMPAT
839
840 Send dummy Change Cipher Spec (CCS) messages in TLS 1.3 handshake to make
841 a TLS 1.3 connection look more like a TLS 1.2 connection.
842
843 This option is only available with OpenSSL 1.1.1 and later.
844
845 .. versionadded:: 3.8
846
Antoine Pitrou8abdb8a2011-12-20 10:13:40 +0100847.. data:: OP_NO_COMPRESSION
848
849 Disable compression on the SSL channel. This is useful if the application
850 protocol supports its own compression scheme.
851
852 This option is only available with OpenSSL 1.0.0 and later.
853
854 .. versionadded:: 3.3
855
Christian Heimes3aeacad2016-09-10 00:19:35 +0200856.. class:: Options
857
858 :class:`enum.IntFlag` collection of OP_* constants.
859
Christian Heimes99a65702016-09-10 23:44:53 +0200860.. data:: OP_NO_TICKET
861
862 Prevent client side from requesting a session ticket.
863
Christian Heimes3aeacad2016-09-10 00:19:35 +0200864 .. versionadded:: 3.6
865
Benjamin Petersoncca27322015-01-23 16:35:37 -0500866.. data:: HAS_ALPN
867
868 Whether the OpenSSL library has built-in support for the *Application-Layer
869 Protocol Negotiation* TLS extension as described in :rfc:`7301`.
870
871 .. versionadded:: 3.5
872
Christian Heimes61d478c2018-01-27 15:51:38 +0100873.. data:: HAS_NEVER_CHECK_COMMON_NAME
874
875 Whether the OpenSSL library has built-in support not checking subject
876 common name and :attr:`SSLContext.hostname_checks_common_name` is
877 writeable.
878
879 .. versionadded:: 3.7
880
Antoine Pitrou501da612011-12-21 09:27:41 +0100881.. data:: HAS_ECDH
882
Christian Heimes698dde12018-02-27 11:54:43 +0100883 Whether the OpenSSL library has built-in support for the Elliptic Curve-based
Antoine Pitrou501da612011-12-21 09:27:41 +0100884 Diffie-Hellman key exchange. This should be true unless the feature was
885 explicitly disabled by the distributor.
886
887 .. versionadded:: 3.3
888
Antoine Pitroud5323212010-10-22 18:19:07 +0000889.. data:: HAS_SNI
890
891 Whether the OpenSSL library has built-in support for the *Server Name
Chandan Kumar63c2c8a2017-06-09 15:13:58 +0530892 Indication* extension (as defined in :rfc:`6066`).
Antoine Pitroud5323212010-10-22 18:19:07 +0000893
894 .. versionadded:: 3.2
895
Antoine Pitroud5d17eb2012-03-22 00:23:03 +0100896.. data:: HAS_NPN
897
Christian Heimes698dde12018-02-27 11:54:43 +0100898 Whether the OpenSSL library has built-in support for the *Next Protocol
Sanyam Khurana338cd832018-01-20 05:55:37 +0530899 Negotiation* as described in the `Application Layer Protocol
900 Negotiation <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Application-Layer_Protocol_Negotiation>`_.
901 When true, you can use the :meth:`SSLContext.set_npn_protocols` method to advertise
Antoine Pitroud5d17eb2012-03-22 00:23:03 +0100902 which protocols you want to support.
903
904 .. versionadded:: 3.3
905
Christian Heimes698dde12018-02-27 11:54:43 +0100906.. data:: HAS_SSLv2
907
908 Whether the OpenSSL library has built-in support for the SSL 2.0 protocol.
909
910 .. versionadded:: 3.7
911
912.. data:: HAS_SSLv3
913
914 Whether the OpenSSL library has built-in support for the SSL 3.0 protocol.
915
916 .. versionadded:: 3.7
917
918.. data:: HAS_TLSv1
919
920 Whether the OpenSSL library has built-in support for the TLS 1.0 protocol.
921
922 .. versionadded:: 3.7
923
924.. data:: HAS_TLSv1_1
925
926 Whether the OpenSSL library has built-in support for the TLS 1.1 protocol.
927
928 .. versionadded:: 3.7
929
930.. data:: HAS_TLSv1_2
931
932 Whether the OpenSSL library has built-in support for the TLS 1.2 protocol.
933
934 .. versionadded:: 3.7
935
Christian Heimescb5b68a2017-09-07 18:07:00 -0700936.. data:: HAS_TLSv1_3
937
938 Whether the OpenSSL library has built-in support for the TLS 1.3 protocol.
939
940 .. versionadded:: 3.7
941
Antoine Pitroud6494802011-07-21 01:11:30 +0200942.. data:: CHANNEL_BINDING_TYPES
943
944 List of supported TLS channel binding types. Strings in this list
945 can be used as arguments to :meth:`SSLSocket.get_channel_binding`.
946
947 .. versionadded:: 3.3
948
Antoine Pitrou04f6a322010-04-05 21:40:07 +0000949.. data:: OPENSSL_VERSION
950
951 The version string of the OpenSSL library loaded by the interpreter::
952
953 >>> ssl.OPENSSL_VERSION
Alex Gaynor275104e2017-03-02 05:23:19 -0500954 'OpenSSL 1.0.2k 26 Jan 2017'
Antoine Pitrou04f6a322010-04-05 21:40:07 +0000955
Antoine Pitrou43a94c312010-04-05 21:44:48 +0000956 .. versionadded:: 3.2
Antoine Pitrou04f6a322010-04-05 21:40:07 +0000957
958.. data:: OPENSSL_VERSION_INFO
959
960 A tuple of five integers representing version information about the
961 OpenSSL library::
962
963 >>> ssl.OPENSSL_VERSION_INFO
Alex Gaynor275104e2017-03-02 05:23:19 -0500964 (1, 0, 2, 11, 15)
Antoine Pitrou04f6a322010-04-05 21:40:07 +0000965
Antoine Pitrou43a94c312010-04-05 21:44:48 +0000966 .. versionadded:: 3.2
Antoine Pitrou04f6a322010-04-05 21:40:07 +0000967
968.. data:: OPENSSL_VERSION_NUMBER
969
970 The raw version number of the OpenSSL library, as a single integer::
971
972 >>> ssl.OPENSSL_VERSION_NUMBER
Alex Gaynor275104e2017-03-02 05:23:19 -0500973 268443839
Antoine Pitrou04f6a322010-04-05 21:40:07 +0000974 >>> hex(ssl.OPENSSL_VERSION_NUMBER)
Alex Gaynor275104e2017-03-02 05:23:19 -0500975 '0x100020bf'
Antoine Pitrou04f6a322010-04-05 21:40:07 +0000976
Antoine Pitrou43a94c312010-04-05 21:44:48 +0000977 .. versionadded:: 3.2
Antoine Pitrou04f6a322010-04-05 21:40:07 +0000978
Antoine Pitrou58ddc9d2013-01-05 21:20:29 +0100979.. data:: ALERT_DESCRIPTION_HANDSHAKE_FAILURE
980 ALERT_DESCRIPTION_INTERNAL_ERROR
981 ALERT_DESCRIPTION_*
982
983 Alert Descriptions from :rfc:`5246` and others. The `IANA TLS Alert Registry
Serhiy Storchaka6dff0202016-05-07 10:49:07 +0300984 <https://www.iana.org/assignments/tls-parameters/tls-parameters.xml#tls-parameters-6>`_
Antoine Pitrou58ddc9d2013-01-05 21:20:29 +0100985 contains this list and references to the RFCs where their meaning is defined.
986
987 Used as the return value of the callback function in
988 :meth:`SSLContext.set_servername_callback`.
989
990 .. versionadded:: 3.4
991
Christian Heimes3aeacad2016-09-10 00:19:35 +0200992.. class:: AlertDescription
993
994 :class:`enum.IntEnum` collection of ALERT_DESCRIPTION_* constants.
995
996 .. versionadded:: 3.6
997
Christian Heimes72d28502013-11-23 13:56:58 +0100998.. data:: Purpose.SERVER_AUTH
999
Antoine Pitrou5bef4102013-11-23 16:16:29 +01001000 Option for :func:`create_default_context` and
1001 :meth:`SSLContext.load_default_certs`. This value indicates that the
1002 context may be used to authenticate Web servers (therefore, it will
1003 be used to create client-side sockets).
Christian Heimes72d28502013-11-23 13:56:58 +01001004
1005 .. versionadded:: 3.4
1006
Christian Heimes6b2ff982013-11-23 14:42:01 +01001007.. data:: Purpose.CLIENT_AUTH
Christian Heimes72d28502013-11-23 13:56:58 +01001008
Antoine Pitrou5bef4102013-11-23 16:16:29 +01001009 Option for :func:`create_default_context` and
1010 :meth:`SSLContext.load_default_certs`. This value indicates that the
1011 context may be used to authenticate Web clients (therefore, it will
1012 be used to create server-side sockets).
Christian Heimes72d28502013-11-23 13:56:58 +01001013
1014 .. versionadded:: 3.4
1015
Christian Heimes3aeacad2016-09-10 00:19:35 +02001016.. class:: SSLErrorNumber
1017
1018 :class:`enum.IntEnum` collection of SSL_ERROR_* constants.
1019
1020 .. versionadded:: 3.6
1021
Christian Heimes698dde12018-02-27 11:54:43 +01001022.. class:: TLSVersion
1023
1024 :class:`enum.IntEnum` collection of SSL and TLS versions for
1025 :attr:`SSLContext.maximum_version` and :attr:`SSLContext.minimum_version`.
1026
1027 .. versionadded:: 3.7
1028
1029.. attribute:: TLSVersion.MINIMUM_SUPPORTED
1030.. attribute:: TLSVersion.MAXIMUM_SUPPORTED
1031
1032 The minimum or maximum supported SSL or TLS version. These are magic
1033 constants. Their values don't reflect the lowest and highest available
1034 TLS/SSL versions.
1035
1036.. attribute:: TLSVersion.SSLv3
1037.. attribute:: TLSVersion.TLSv1
1038.. attribute:: TLSVersion.TLSv1_1
1039.. attribute:: TLSVersion.TLSv1_2
1040.. attribute:: TLSVersion.TLSv1_3
1041
1042 SSL 3.0 to TLS 1.3.
Thomas Woutersed03b412007-08-28 21:37:11 +00001043
Antoine Pitrou152efa22010-05-16 18:19:27 +00001044SSL Sockets
1045-----------
Thomas Wouters1b7f8912007-09-19 03:06:30 +00001046
Victor Stinner3c3d3c72014-10-10 12:06:51 +02001047.. class:: SSLSocket(socket.socket)
Antoine Pitrou792ff3e2010-09-19 13:19:21 +00001048
Victor Stinner3c3d3c72014-10-10 12:06:51 +02001049 SSL sockets provide the following methods of :ref:`socket-objects`:
Zachary Wareba9fb0d2014-06-11 15:02:25 -05001050
Victor Stinner3c3d3c72014-10-10 12:06:51 +02001051 - :meth:`~socket.socket.accept()`
1052 - :meth:`~socket.socket.bind()`
1053 - :meth:`~socket.socket.close()`
1054 - :meth:`~socket.socket.connect()`
1055 - :meth:`~socket.socket.detach()`
1056 - :meth:`~socket.socket.fileno()`
1057 - :meth:`~socket.socket.getpeername()`, :meth:`~socket.socket.getsockname()`
1058 - :meth:`~socket.socket.getsockopt()`, :meth:`~socket.socket.setsockopt()`
1059 - :meth:`~socket.socket.gettimeout()`, :meth:`~socket.socket.settimeout()`,
1060 :meth:`~socket.socket.setblocking()`
1061 - :meth:`~socket.socket.listen()`
1062 - :meth:`~socket.socket.makefile()`
1063 - :meth:`~socket.socket.recv()`, :meth:`~socket.socket.recv_into()`
1064 (but passing a non-zero ``flags`` argument is not allowed)
1065 - :meth:`~socket.socket.send()`, :meth:`~socket.socket.sendall()` (with
1066 the same limitation)
Victor Stinner92127a52014-10-10 12:43:17 +02001067 - :meth:`~socket.socket.sendfile()` (but :mod:`os.sendfile` will be used
1068 for plain-text sockets only, else :meth:`~socket.socket.send()` will be used)
Victor Stinner3c3d3c72014-10-10 12:06:51 +02001069 - :meth:`~socket.socket.shutdown()`
Zachary Wareba9fb0d2014-06-11 15:02:25 -05001070
Victor Stinner3c3d3c72014-10-10 12:06:51 +02001071 However, since the SSL (and TLS) protocol has its own framing atop
1072 of TCP, the SSL sockets abstraction can, in certain respects, diverge from
1073 the specification of normal, OS-level sockets. See especially the
1074 :ref:`notes on non-blocking sockets <ssl-nonblocking>`.
Antoine Pitroue1f2f302010-09-19 13:56:11 +00001075
Christian Heimes9d50ab52018-02-27 10:17:30 +01001076 Instances of :class:`SSLSocket` must be created using the
Alex Gaynor1cf2a802017-02-28 22:26:56 -05001077 :meth:`SSLContext.wrap_socket` method.
Victor Stinnerd28fe8c2014-10-10 12:07:19 +02001078
Victor Stinner92127a52014-10-10 12:43:17 +02001079 .. versionchanged:: 3.5
1080 The :meth:`sendfile` method was added.
1081
Victor Stinner14690702015-04-06 22:46:13 +02001082 .. versionchanged:: 3.5
1083 The :meth:`shutdown` does not reset the socket timeout each time bytes
1084 are received or sent. The socket timeout is now to maximum total duration
1085 of the shutdown.
1086
Christian Heimesd0486372016-09-10 23:23:33 +02001087 .. deprecated:: 3.6
1088 It is deprecated to create a :class:`SSLSocket` instance directly, use
1089 :meth:`SSLContext.wrap_socket` to wrap a socket.
1090
Christian Heimes9d50ab52018-02-27 10:17:30 +01001091 .. versionchanged:: 3.7
1092 :class:`SSLSocket` instances must to created with
1093 :meth:`~SSLContext.wrap_socket`. In earlier versions, it was possible
1094 to create instances directly. This was never documented or officially
1095 supported.
Antoine Pitrou6f5dcb12011-07-11 01:35:48 +02001096
1097SSL sockets also have the following additional methods and attributes:
Antoine Pitrou792ff3e2010-09-19 13:19:21 +00001098
Martin Panterf6b1d662016-03-28 00:22:09 +00001099.. method:: SSLSocket.read(len=1024, buffer=None)
Antoine Pitroub1fdf472014-10-05 20:41:53 +02001100
1101 Read up to *len* bytes of data from the SSL socket and return the result as
1102 a ``bytes`` instance. If *buffer* is specified, then read into the buffer
1103 instead, and return the number of bytes read.
1104
Victor Stinner41f92c22014-10-10 12:05:56 +02001105 Raise :exc:`SSLWantReadError` or :exc:`SSLWantWriteError` if the socket is
Victor Stinnercfb2a0a2014-10-10 12:45:10 +02001106 :ref:`non-blocking <ssl-nonblocking>` and the read would block.
Victor Stinner41f92c22014-10-10 12:05:56 +02001107
1108 As at any time a re-negotiation is possible, a call to :meth:`read` can also
1109 cause write operations.
1110
Victor Stinner14690702015-04-06 22:46:13 +02001111 .. versionchanged:: 3.5
1112 The socket timeout is no more reset each time bytes are received or sent.
1113 The socket timeout is now to maximum total duration to read up to *len*
1114 bytes.
1115
Christian Heimesd0486372016-09-10 23:23:33 +02001116 .. deprecated:: 3.6
1117 Use :meth:`~SSLSocket.recv` instead of :meth:`~SSLSocket.read`.
1118
Antoine Pitroub1fdf472014-10-05 20:41:53 +02001119.. method:: SSLSocket.write(buf)
1120
1121 Write *buf* to the SSL socket and return the number of bytes written. The
1122 *buf* argument must be an object supporting the buffer interface.
1123
Victor Stinner41f92c22014-10-10 12:05:56 +02001124 Raise :exc:`SSLWantReadError` or :exc:`SSLWantWriteError` if the socket is
Victor Stinnercfb2a0a2014-10-10 12:45:10 +02001125 :ref:`non-blocking <ssl-nonblocking>` and the write would block.
Victor Stinner41f92c22014-10-10 12:05:56 +02001126
1127 As at any time a re-negotiation is possible, a call to :meth:`write` can
1128 also cause read operations.
1129
Victor Stinner14690702015-04-06 22:46:13 +02001130 .. versionchanged:: 3.5
1131 The socket timeout is no more reset each time bytes are received or sent.
1132 The socket timeout is now to maximum total duration to write *buf*.
1133
Christian Heimesd0486372016-09-10 23:23:33 +02001134 .. deprecated:: 3.6
1135 Use :meth:`~SSLSocket.send` instead of :meth:`~SSLSocket.write`.
1136
Antoine Pitroub1fdf472014-10-05 20:41:53 +02001137.. note::
1138
1139 The :meth:`~SSLSocket.read` and :meth:`~SSLSocket.write` methods are the
1140 low-level methods that read and write unencrypted, application-level data
Martin Panter1f1177d2015-10-31 11:48:53 +00001141 and decrypt/encrypt it to encrypted, wire-level data. These methods
Antoine Pitroub1fdf472014-10-05 20:41:53 +02001142 require an active SSL connection, i.e. the handshake was completed and
1143 :meth:`SSLSocket.unwrap` was not called.
1144
1145 Normally you should use the socket API methods like
1146 :meth:`~socket.socket.recv` and :meth:`~socket.socket.send` instead of these
1147 methods.
1148
Bill Janssen48dc27c2007-12-05 03:38:10 +00001149.. method:: SSLSocket.do_handshake()
1150
Antoine Pitroub3593ca2011-07-11 01:39:19 +02001151 Perform the SSL setup handshake.
Bill Janssen48dc27c2007-12-05 03:38:10 +00001152
Christian Heimes1aa9a752013-12-02 02:41:19 +01001153 .. versionchanged:: 3.4
Zachary Ware88a19772014-07-25 13:30:50 -05001154 The handshake method also performs :func:`match_hostname` when the
Christian Heimes1aa9a752013-12-02 02:41:19 +01001155 :attr:`~SSLContext.check_hostname` attribute of the socket's
1156 :attr:`~SSLSocket.context` is true.
1157
Victor Stinner14690702015-04-06 22:46:13 +02001158 .. versionchanged:: 3.5
1159 The socket timeout is no more reset each time bytes are received or sent.
1160 The socket timeout is now to maximum total duration of the handshake.
1161
Christian Heimes61d478c2018-01-27 15:51:38 +01001162 .. versionchanged:: 3.7
1163 Hostname or IP address is matched by OpenSSL during handshake. The
1164 function :func:`match_hostname` is no longer used. In case OpenSSL
1165 refuses a hostname or IP address, the handshake is aborted early and
1166 a TLS alert message is send to the peer.
1167
Thomas Wouters1b7f8912007-09-19 03:06:30 +00001168.. method:: SSLSocket.getpeercert(binary_form=False)
1169
Georg Brandl7f01a132009-09-16 15:58:14 +00001170 If there is no certificate for the peer on the other end of the connection,
Antoine Pitrou20b85552013-09-29 19:50:53 +02001171 return ``None``. If the SSL handshake hasn't been done yet, raise
1172 :exc:`ValueError`.
Thomas Wouters1b7f8912007-09-19 03:06:30 +00001173
Antoine Pitroud34941a2013-04-16 20:27:17 +02001174 If the ``binary_form`` parameter is :const:`False`, and a certificate was
Georg Brandl7f01a132009-09-16 15:58:14 +00001175 received from the peer, this method returns a :class:`dict` instance. If the
1176 certificate was not validated, the dict is empty. If the certificate was
Antoine Pitroub7c6c812012-08-16 22:14:43 +02001177 validated, it returns a dict with several keys, amongst them ``subject``
1178 (the principal for which the certificate was issued) and ``issuer``
1179 (the principal issuing the certificate). If a certificate contains an
1180 instance of the *Subject Alternative Name* extension (see :rfc:`3280`),
1181 there will also be a ``subjectAltName`` key in the dictionary.
Thomas Wouters1b7f8912007-09-19 03:06:30 +00001182
Antoine Pitroub7c6c812012-08-16 22:14:43 +02001183 The ``subject`` and ``issuer`` fields are tuples containing the sequence
1184 of relative distinguished names (RDNs) given in the certificate's data
1185 structure for the respective fields, and each RDN is a sequence of
1186 name-value pairs. Here is a real-world example::
Thomas Wouters1b7f8912007-09-19 03:06:30 +00001187
Antoine Pitroub7c6c812012-08-16 22:14:43 +02001188 {'issuer': ((('countryName', 'IL'),),
1189 (('organizationName', 'StartCom Ltd.'),),
1190 (('organizationalUnitName',
1191 'Secure Digital Certificate Signing'),),
1192 (('commonName',
1193 'StartCom Class 2 Primary Intermediate Server CA'),)),
1194 'notAfter': 'Nov 22 08:15:19 2013 GMT',
1195 'notBefore': 'Nov 21 03:09:52 2011 GMT',
1196 'serialNumber': '95F0',
1197 'subject': ((('description', '571208-SLe257oHY9fVQ07Z'),),
1198 (('countryName', 'US'),),
1199 (('stateOrProvinceName', 'California'),),
1200 (('localityName', 'San Francisco'),),
1201 (('organizationName', 'Electronic Frontier Foundation, Inc.'),),
1202 (('commonName', '*.eff.org'),),
1203 (('emailAddress', 'hostmaster@eff.org'),)),
1204 'subjectAltName': (('DNS', '*.eff.org'), ('DNS', 'eff.org')),
1205 'version': 3}
1206
1207 .. note::
Larry Hastings3732ed22014-03-15 21:13:56 -07001208
Antoine Pitroub7c6c812012-08-16 22:14:43 +02001209 To validate a certificate for a particular service, you can use the
1210 :func:`match_hostname` function.
Thomas Wouters1b7f8912007-09-19 03:06:30 +00001211
Georg Brandl7f01a132009-09-16 15:58:14 +00001212 If the ``binary_form`` parameter is :const:`True`, and a certificate was
1213 provided, this method returns the DER-encoded form of the entire certificate
1214 as a sequence of bytes, or :const:`None` if the peer did not provide a
Antoine Pitroud34941a2013-04-16 20:27:17 +02001215 certificate. Whether the peer provides a certificate depends on the SSL
1216 socket's role:
1217
1218 * for a client SSL socket, the server will always provide a certificate,
1219 regardless of whether validation was required;
1220
1221 * for a server SSL socket, the client will only provide a certificate
1222 when requested by the server; therefore :meth:`getpeercert` will return
1223 :const:`None` if you used :const:`CERT_NONE` (rather than
1224 :const:`CERT_OPTIONAL` or :const:`CERT_REQUIRED`).
Thomas Wouters1b7f8912007-09-19 03:06:30 +00001225
Antoine Pitroufb046912010-11-09 20:21:19 +00001226 .. versionchanged:: 3.2
1227 The returned dictionary includes additional items such as ``issuer``
1228 and ``notBefore``.
1229
Antoine Pitrou20b85552013-09-29 19:50:53 +02001230 .. versionchanged:: 3.4
1231 :exc:`ValueError` is raised when the handshake isn't done.
Christian Heimesbd3a7f92013-11-21 03:40:15 +01001232 The returned dictionary includes additional X509v3 extension items
Larry Hastings3732ed22014-03-15 21:13:56 -07001233 such as ``crlDistributionPoints``, ``caIssuers`` and ``OCSP`` URIs.
Christian Heimesbd3a7f92013-11-21 03:40:15 +01001234
Thomas Wouters1b7f8912007-09-19 03:06:30 +00001235.. method:: SSLSocket.cipher()
1236
Georg Brandl7f01a132009-09-16 15:58:14 +00001237 Returns a three-value tuple containing the name of the cipher being used, the
1238 version of the SSL protocol that defines its use, and the number of secret
1239 bits being used. If no connection has been established, returns ``None``.
Thomas Wouters1b7f8912007-09-19 03:06:30 +00001240
Benjamin Peterson4cb17812015-01-07 11:14:26 -06001241.. method:: SSLSocket.shared_ciphers()
1242
1243 Return the list of ciphers shared by the client during the handshake. Each
1244 entry of the returned list is a three-value tuple containing the name of the
1245 cipher, the version of the SSL protocol that defines its use, and the number
1246 of secret bits the cipher uses. :meth:`~SSLSocket.shared_ciphers` returns
1247 ``None`` if no connection has been established or the socket is a client
1248 socket.
1249
1250 .. versionadded:: 3.5
1251
Antoine Pitrou8abdb8a2011-12-20 10:13:40 +01001252.. method:: SSLSocket.compression()
1253
1254 Return the compression algorithm being used as a string, or ``None``
1255 if the connection isn't compressed.
1256
1257 If the higher-level protocol supports its own compression mechanism,
1258 you can use :data:`OP_NO_COMPRESSION` to disable SSL-level compression.
1259
1260 .. versionadded:: 3.3
1261
Antoine Pitroud6494802011-07-21 01:11:30 +02001262.. method:: SSLSocket.get_channel_binding(cb_type="tls-unique")
1263
1264 Get channel binding data for current connection, as a bytes object. Returns
1265 ``None`` if not connected or the handshake has not been completed.
1266
1267 The *cb_type* parameter allow selection of the desired channel binding
1268 type. Valid channel binding types are listed in the
1269 :data:`CHANNEL_BINDING_TYPES` list. Currently only the 'tls-unique' channel
1270 binding, defined by :rfc:`5929`, is supported. :exc:`ValueError` will be
1271 raised if an unsupported channel binding type is requested.
1272
1273 .. versionadded:: 3.3
Thomas Wouters1b7f8912007-09-19 03:06:30 +00001274
Benjamin Petersoncca27322015-01-23 16:35:37 -05001275.. method:: SSLSocket.selected_alpn_protocol()
1276
1277 Return the protocol that was selected during the TLS handshake. If
1278 :meth:`SSLContext.set_alpn_protocols` was not called, if the other party does
Benjamin Peterson88615022015-01-23 17:30:26 -05001279 not support ALPN, if this socket does not support any of the client's
1280 proposed protocols, or if the handshake has not happened yet, ``None`` is
Benjamin Petersoncca27322015-01-23 16:35:37 -05001281 returned.
1282
1283 .. versionadded:: 3.5
1284
Antoine Pitroud5d17eb2012-03-22 00:23:03 +01001285.. method:: SSLSocket.selected_npn_protocol()
1286
Benjamin Petersoncca27322015-01-23 16:35:37 -05001287 Return the higher-level protocol that was selected during the TLS/SSL
Antoine Pitrou47e40422014-09-04 21:00:10 +02001288 handshake. If :meth:`SSLContext.set_npn_protocols` was not called, or
1289 if the other party does not support NPN, or if the handshake has not yet
1290 happened, this will return ``None``.
Antoine Pitroud5d17eb2012-03-22 00:23:03 +01001291
1292 .. versionadded:: 3.3
1293
Benjamin Peterson4aeec042008-08-19 21:42:13 +00001294.. method:: SSLSocket.unwrap()
1295
Georg Brandl7f01a132009-09-16 15:58:14 +00001296 Performs the SSL shutdown handshake, which removes the TLS layer from the
1297 underlying socket, and returns the underlying socket object. This can be
1298 used to go from encrypted operation over a connection to unencrypted. The
1299 returned socket should always be used for further communication with the
1300 other side of the connection, rather than the original socket.
Benjamin Peterson4aeec042008-08-19 21:42:13 +00001301
Antoine Pitrou47e40422014-09-04 21:00:10 +02001302.. method:: SSLSocket.version()
1303
1304 Return the actual SSL protocol version negotiated by the connection
1305 as a string, or ``None`` is no secure connection is established.
1306 As of this writing, possible return values include ``"SSLv2"``,
1307 ``"SSLv3"``, ``"TLSv1"``, ``"TLSv1.1"`` and ``"TLSv1.2"``.
1308 Recent OpenSSL versions may define more return values.
1309
1310 .. versionadded:: 3.5
1311
Antoine Pitroub1fdf472014-10-05 20:41:53 +02001312.. method:: SSLSocket.pending()
1313
1314 Returns the number of already decrypted bytes available for read, pending on
1315 the connection.
1316
Antoine Pitrouec883db2010-05-24 21:20:20 +00001317.. attribute:: SSLSocket.context
1318
1319 The :class:`SSLContext` object this SSL socket is tied to. If the SSL
Christian Heimes90f05a52018-02-27 09:21:34 +01001320 socket was created using the deprecated :func:`wrap_socket` function
Antoine Pitrouec883db2010-05-24 21:20:20 +00001321 (rather than :meth:`SSLContext.wrap_socket`), this is a custom context
1322 object created for this SSL socket.
1323
1324 .. versionadded:: 3.2
1325
Antoine Pitroub1fdf472014-10-05 20:41:53 +02001326.. attribute:: SSLSocket.server_side
1327
1328 A boolean which is ``True`` for server-side sockets and ``False`` for
1329 client-side sockets.
1330
Victor Stinner41f92c22014-10-10 12:05:56 +02001331 .. versionadded:: 3.2
Antoine Pitroub1fdf472014-10-05 20:41:53 +02001332
1333.. attribute:: SSLSocket.server_hostname
1334
Victor Stinner41f92c22014-10-10 12:05:56 +02001335 Hostname of the server: :class:`str` type, or ``None`` for server-side
1336 socket or if the hostname was not specified in the constructor.
Antoine Pitroub1fdf472014-10-05 20:41:53 +02001337
Victor Stinner41f92c22014-10-10 12:05:56 +02001338 .. versionadded:: 3.2
Antoine Pitroub1fdf472014-10-05 20:41:53 +02001339
Christian Heimes11a14932018-02-24 02:35:08 +01001340 .. versionchanged:: 3.7
1341 The attribute is now always ASCII text. When ``server_hostname`` is
1342 an internationalized domain name (IDN), this attribute now stores the
1343 A-label form (``"xn--pythn-mua.org"``), rather than the U-label form
1344 (``"pythön.org"``).
1345
Christian Heimes99a65702016-09-10 23:44:53 +02001346.. attribute:: SSLSocket.session
1347
1348 The :class:`SSLSession` for this SSL connection. The session is available
1349 for client and server side sockets after the TLS handshake has been
1350 performed. For client sockets the session can be set before
1351 :meth:`~SSLSocket.do_handshake` has been called to reuse a session.
1352
1353 .. versionadded:: 3.6
1354
1355.. attribute:: SSLSocket.session_reused
1356
1357 .. versionadded:: 3.6
1358
Antoine Pitrouec883db2010-05-24 21:20:20 +00001359
Antoine Pitrou152efa22010-05-16 18:19:27 +00001360SSL Contexts
1361------------
1362
Antoine Pitroucafaad42010-05-24 15:58:43 +00001363.. versionadded:: 3.2
1364
Antoine Pitroub0182c82010-10-12 20:09:02 +00001365An SSL context holds various data longer-lived than single SSL connections,
1366such as SSL configuration options, certificate(s) and private key(s).
1367It also manages a cache of SSL sessions for server-side sockets, in order
1368to speed up repeated connections from the same clients.
1369
Christian Heimes598894f2016-09-05 23:19:05 +02001370.. class:: SSLContext(protocol=PROTOCOL_TLS)
Antoine Pitrou152efa22010-05-16 18:19:27 +00001371
Christian Heimes598894f2016-09-05 23:19:05 +02001372 Create a new SSL context. You may pass *protocol* which must be one
Christian Heimes90f05a52018-02-27 09:21:34 +01001373 of the ``PROTOCOL_*`` constants defined in this module. The parameter
1374 specifies which version of the SSL protocol to use. Typically, the
1375 server chooses a particular protocol version, and the client must adapt
1376 to the server's choice. Most of the versions are not interoperable
1377 with the other versions. If not specified, the default is
1378 :data:`PROTOCOL_TLS`; it provides the most compatibility with other
1379 versions.
1380
1381 Here's a table showing which versions in a client (down the side) can connect
1382 to which versions in a server (along the top):
1383
1384 .. table::
1385
1386 ======================== ============ ============ ============= ========= =========== ===========
1387 *client* / **server** **SSLv2** **SSLv3** **TLS** [3]_ **TLSv1** **TLSv1.1** **TLSv1.2**
1388 ------------------------ ------------ ------------ ------------- --------- ----------- -----------
1389 *SSLv2* yes no no [1]_ no no no
1390 *SSLv3* no yes no [2]_ no no no
1391 *TLS* (*SSLv23*) [3]_ no [1]_ no [2]_ yes yes yes yes
1392 *TLSv1* no no yes yes no no
1393 *TLSv1.1* no no yes no yes no
1394 *TLSv1.2* no no yes no no yes
1395 ======================== ============ ============ ============= ========= =========== ===========
1396
1397 .. rubric:: Footnotes
1398 .. [1] :class:`SSLContext` disables SSLv2 with :data:`OP_NO_SSLv2` by default.
1399 .. [2] :class:`SSLContext` disables SSLv3 with :data:`OP_NO_SSLv3` by default.
1400 .. [3] TLS 1.3 protocol will be available with :data:`PROTOCOL_TLS` in
1401 OpenSSL >= 1.1.1. There is no dedicated PROTOCOL constant for just
1402 TLS 1.3.
Antoine Pitrou5bef4102013-11-23 16:16:29 +01001403
1404 .. seealso::
1405 :func:`create_default_context` lets the :mod:`ssl` module choose
1406 security settings for a given purpose.
Antoine Pitroub0182c82010-10-12 20:09:02 +00001407
Christian Heimes01113fa2016-09-05 23:23:24 +02001408 .. versionchanged:: 3.6
Christian Heimes598894f2016-09-05 23:19:05 +02001409
Christian Heimes358cfd42016-09-10 22:43:48 +02001410 The context is created with secure default values. The options
1411 :data:`OP_NO_COMPRESSION`, :data:`OP_CIPHER_SERVER_PREFERENCE`,
1412 :data:`OP_SINGLE_DH_USE`, :data:`OP_SINGLE_ECDH_USE`,
1413 :data:`OP_NO_SSLv2` (except for :data:`PROTOCOL_SSLv2`),
1414 and :data:`OP_NO_SSLv3` (except for :data:`PROTOCOL_SSLv3`) are
1415 set by default. The initial cipher suite list contains only ``HIGH``
1416 ciphers, no ``NULL`` ciphers and no ``MD5`` ciphers (except for
1417 :data:`PROTOCOL_SSLv2`).
Christian Heimes598894f2016-09-05 23:19:05 +02001418
Antoine Pitrou152efa22010-05-16 18:19:27 +00001419
1420:class:`SSLContext` objects have the following methods and attributes:
1421
Christian Heimes9a5395a2013-06-17 15:44:12 +02001422.. method:: SSLContext.cert_store_stats()
1423
1424 Get statistics about quantities of loaded X.509 certificates, count of
1425 X.509 certificates flagged as CA certificates and certificate revocation
1426 lists as dictionary.
1427
1428 Example for a context with one CA cert and one other cert::
1429
1430 >>> context.cert_store_stats()
1431 {'crl': 0, 'x509_ca': 1, 'x509': 2}
1432
1433 .. versionadded:: 3.4
1434
Christian Heimesefff7062013-11-21 03:35:02 +01001435
Antoine Pitrou4fd1e6a2011-08-25 14:39:44 +02001436.. method:: SSLContext.load_cert_chain(certfile, keyfile=None, password=None)
Antoine Pitrou152efa22010-05-16 18:19:27 +00001437
1438 Load a private key and the corresponding certificate. The *certfile*
1439 string must be the path to a single file in PEM format containing the
1440 certificate as well as any number of CA certificates needed to establish
1441 the certificate's authenticity. The *keyfile* string, if present, must
1442 point to a file containing the private key in. Otherwise the private
1443 key will be taken from *certfile* as well. See the discussion of
1444 :ref:`ssl-certificates` for more information on how the certificate
1445 is stored in the *certfile*.
1446
Antoine Pitrou4fd1e6a2011-08-25 14:39:44 +02001447 The *password* argument may be a function to call to get the password for
1448 decrypting the private key. It will only be called if the private key is
1449 encrypted and a password is necessary. It will be called with no arguments,
1450 and it should return a string, bytes, or bytearray. If the return value is
1451 a string it will be encoded as UTF-8 before using it to decrypt the key.
1452 Alternatively a string, bytes, or bytearray value may be supplied directly
1453 as the *password* argument. It will be ignored if the private key is not
1454 encrypted and no password is needed.
1455
1456 If the *password* argument is not specified and a password is required,
1457 OpenSSL's built-in password prompting mechanism will be used to
1458 interactively prompt the user for a password.
1459
Antoine Pitrou152efa22010-05-16 18:19:27 +00001460 An :class:`SSLError` is raised if the private key doesn't
1461 match with the certificate.
1462
Antoine Pitrou4fd1e6a2011-08-25 14:39:44 +02001463 .. versionchanged:: 3.3
1464 New optional argument *password*.
1465
Christian Heimes72d28502013-11-23 13:56:58 +01001466.. method:: SSLContext.load_default_certs(purpose=Purpose.SERVER_AUTH)
1467
1468 Load a set of default "certification authority" (CA) certificates from
1469 default locations. On Windows it loads CA certs from the ``CA`` and
1470 ``ROOT`` system stores. On other systems it calls
1471 :meth:`SSLContext.set_default_verify_paths`. In the future the method may
1472 load CA certificates from other locations, too.
1473
1474 The *purpose* flag specifies what kind of CA certificates are loaded. The
1475 default settings :data:`Purpose.SERVER_AUTH` loads certificates, that are
1476 flagged and trusted for TLS web server authentication (client side
Christian Heimes6b2ff982013-11-23 14:42:01 +01001477 sockets). :data:`Purpose.CLIENT_AUTH` loads CA certificates for client
Christian Heimes72d28502013-11-23 13:56:58 +01001478 certificate verification on the server side.
1479
1480 .. versionadded:: 3.4
1481
Christian Heimesefff7062013-11-21 03:35:02 +01001482.. method:: SSLContext.load_verify_locations(cafile=None, capath=None, cadata=None)
Antoine Pitrou152efa22010-05-16 18:19:27 +00001483
1484 Load a set of "certification authority" (CA) certificates used to validate
1485 other peers' certificates when :data:`verify_mode` is other than
1486 :data:`CERT_NONE`. At least one of *cafile* or *capath* must be specified.
1487
Christian Heimes22587792013-11-21 23:56:13 +01001488 This method can also load certification revocation lists (CRLs) in PEM or
Donald Stufft8b852f12014-05-20 12:58:38 -04001489 DER format. In order to make use of CRLs, :attr:`SSLContext.verify_flags`
Christian Heimes22587792013-11-21 23:56:13 +01001490 must be configured properly.
1491
Christian Heimes3e738f92013-06-09 18:07:16 +02001492 The *cafile* string, if present, is the path to a file of concatenated
Antoine Pitrou152efa22010-05-16 18:19:27 +00001493 CA certificates in PEM format. See the discussion of
1494 :ref:`ssl-certificates` for more information about how to arrange the
1495 certificates in this file.
1496
1497 The *capath* string, if present, is
1498 the path to a directory containing several CA certificates in PEM format,
1499 following an `OpenSSL specific layout
Sanyam Khurana338cd832018-01-20 05:55:37 +05301500 <https://www.openssl.org/docs/manmaster/man3/SSL_CTX_load_verify_locations.html>`_.
Antoine Pitrou152efa22010-05-16 18:19:27 +00001501
Christian Heimesefff7062013-11-21 03:35:02 +01001502 The *cadata* object, if present, is either an ASCII string of one or more
Serhiy Storchakab757c832014-12-05 22:25:22 +02001503 PEM-encoded certificates or a :term:`bytes-like object` of DER-encoded
Christian Heimesefff7062013-11-21 03:35:02 +01001504 certificates. Like with *capath* extra lines around PEM-encoded
1505 certificates are ignored but at least one certificate must be present.
1506
1507 .. versionchanged:: 3.4
1508 New optional argument *cadata*
1509
Christian Heimes9a5395a2013-06-17 15:44:12 +02001510.. method:: SSLContext.get_ca_certs(binary_form=False)
1511
1512 Get a list of loaded "certification authority" (CA) certificates. If the
1513 ``binary_form`` parameter is :const:`False` each list
1514 entry is a dict like the output of :meth:`SSLSocket.getpeercert`. Otherwise
1515 the method returns a list of DER-encoded certificates. The returned list
1516 does not contain certificates from *capath* unless a certificate was
1517 requested and loaded by a SSL connection.
1518
Antoine Pitrou97aa9532015-04-13 21:06:15 +02001519 .. note::
1520 Certificates in a capath directory aren't loaded unless they have
1521 been used at least once.
1522
Larry Hastingsd36fc432013-08-03 02:49:53 -07001523 .. versionadded:: 3.4
Christian Heimes9a5395a2013-06-17 15:44:12 +02001524
Christian Heimes25bfcd52016-09-06 00:04:45 +02001525.. method:: SSLContext.get_ciphers()
1526
1527 Get a list of enabled ciphers. The list is in order of cipher priority.
1528 See :meth:`SSLContext.set_ciphers`.
1529
1530 Example::
1531
1532 >>> ctx = ssl.SSLContext(ssl.PROTOCOL_SSLv23)
1533 >>> ctx.set_ciphers('ECDHE+AESGCM:!ECDSA')
1534 >>> ctx.get_ciphers() # OpenSSL 1.0.x
1535 [{'alg_bits': 256,
1536 'description': 'ECDHE-RSA-AES256-GCM-SHA384 TLSv1.2 Kx=ECDH Au=RSA '
1537 'Enc=AESGCM(256) Mac=AEAD',
1538 'id': 50380848,
1539 'name': 'ECDHE-RSA-AES256-GCM-SHA384',
1540 'protocol': 'TLSv1/SSLv3',
1541 'strength_bits': 256},
1542 {'alg_bits': 128,
1543 'description': 'ECDHE-RSA-AES128-GCM-SHA256 TLSv1.2 Kx=ECDH Au=RSA '
1544 'Enc=AESGCM(128) Mac=AEAD',
1545 'id': 50380847,
1546 'name': 'ECDHE-RSA-AES128-GCM-SHA256',
1547 'protocol': 'TLSv1/SSLv3',
1548 'strength_bits': 128}]
1549
1550 On OpenSSL 1.1 and newer the cipher dict contains additional fields::
Marco Buttu7b2491a2017-04-13 16:17:59 +02001551
Christian Heimes25bfcd52016-09-06 00:04:45 +02001552 >>> ctx.get_ciphers() # OpenSSL 1.1+
1553 [{'aead': True,
1554 'alg_bits': 256,
1555 'auth': 'auth-rsa',
1556 'description': 'ECDHE-RSA-AES256-GCM-SHA384 TLSv1.2 Kx=ECDH Au=RSA '
1557 'Enc=AESGCM(256) Mac=AEAD',
1558 'digest': None,
1559 'id': 50380848,
1560 'kea': 'kx-ecdhe',
1561 'name': 'ECDHE-RSA-AES256-GCM-SHA384',
1562 'protocol': 'TLSv1.2',
1563 'strength_bits': 256,
1564 'symmetric': 'aes-256-gcm'},
1565 {'aead': True,
1566 'alg_bits': 128,
1567 'auth': 'auth-rsa',
1568 'description': 'ECDHE-RSA-AES128-GCM-SHA256 TLSv1.2 Kx=ECDH Au=RSA '
1569 'Enc=AESGCM(128) Mac=AEAD',
1570 'digest': None,
1571 'id': 50380847,
1572 'kea': 'kx-ecdhe',
1573 'name': 'ECDHE-RSA-AES128-GCM-SHA256',
1574 'protocol': 'TLSv1.2',
1575 'strength_bits': 128,
1576 'symmetric': 'aes-128-gcm'}]
1577
1578 Availability: OpenSSL 1.0.2+
1579
1580 .. versionadded:: 3.6
1581
Antoine Pitrou664c2d12010-11-17 20:29:42 +00001582.. method:: SSLContext.set_default_verify_paths()
1583
1584 Load a set of default "certification authority" (CA) certificates from
1585 a filesystem path defined when building the OpenSSL library. Unfortunately,
1586 there's no easy way to know whether this method succeeds: no error is
1587 returned if no certificates are to be found. When the OpenSSL library is
1588 provided as part of the operating system, though, it is likely to be
1589 configured properly.
1590
Antoine Pitrou152efa22010-05-16 18:19:27 +00001591.. method:: SSLContext.set_ciphers(ciphers)
1592
1593 Set the available ciphers for sockets created with this context.
1594 It should be a string in the `OpenSSL cipher list format
Felipe19e4d932017-09-20 20:20:18 +02001595 <https://wiki.openssl.org/index.php/Manual:Ciphers(1)#CIPHER_LIST_FORMAT>`_.
Antoine Pitrou152efa22010-05-16 18:19:27 +00001596 If no cipher can be selected (because compile-time options or other
1597 configuration forbids use of all the specified ciphers), an
1598 :class:`SSLError` will be raised.
1599
1600 .. note::
1601 when connected, the :meth:`SSLSocket.cipher` method of SSL sockets will
1602 give the currently selected cipher.
1603
Benjamin Petersoncca27322015-01-23 16:35:37 -05001604.. method:: SSLContext.set_alpn_protocols(protocols)
1605
1606 Specify which protocols the socket should advertise during the SSL/TLS
1607 handshake. It should be a list of ASCII strings, like ``['http/1.1',
1608 'spdy/2']``, ordered by preference. The selection of a protocol will happen
1609 during the handshake, and will play out according to :rfc:`7301`. After a
1610 successful handshake, the :meth:`SSLSocket.selected_alpn_protocol` method will
1611 return the agreed-upon protocol.
1612
1613 This method will raise :exc:`NotImplementedError` if :data:`HAS_ALPN` is
1614 False.
1615
Christian Heimes7b40cb72017-08-15 10:33:43 +02001616 OpenSSL 1.1.0 to 1.1.0e will abort the handshake and raise :exc:`SSLError`
1617 when both sides support ALPN but cannot agree on a protocol. 1.1.0f+
1618 behaves like 1.0.2, :meth:`SSLSocket.selected_alpn_protocol` returns None.
Christian Heimes598894f2016-09-05 23:19:05 +02001619
Benjamin Petersoncca27322015-01-23 16:35:37 -05001620 .. versionadded:: 3.5
1621
Antoine Pitroud5d17eb2012-03-22 00:23:03 +01001622.. method:: SSLContext.set_npn_protocols(protocols)
1623
R David Murrayc7f75792013-06-26 15:11:12 -04001624 Specify which protocols the socket should advertise during the SSL/TLS
Antoine Pitroud5d17eb2012-03-22 00:23:03 +01001625 handshake. It should be a list of strings, like ``['http/1.1', 'spdy/2']``,
1626 ordered by preference. The selection of a protocol will happen during the
Sanyam Khurana338cd832018-01-20 05:55:37 +05301627 handshake, and will play out according to the `Application Layer Protocol Negotiation
1628 <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Application-Layer_Protocol_Negotiation>`_. After a
Antoine Pitroud5d17eb2012-03-22 00:23:03 +01001629 successful handshake, the :meth:`SSLSocket.selected_npn_protocol` method will
1630 return the agreed-upon protocol.
1631
1632 This method will raise :exc:`NotImplementedError` if :data:`HAS_NPN` is
1633 False.
1634
1635 .. versionadded:: 3.3
1636
Christian Heimes11a14932018-02-24 02:35:08 +01001637.. attribute:: SSLContext.sni_callback
Antoine Pitrou58ddc9d2013-01-05 21:20:29 +01001638
1639 Register a callback function that will be called after the TLS Client Hello
1640 handshake message has been received by the SSL/TLS server when the TLS client
1641 specifies a server name indication. The server name indication mechanism
1642 is specified in :rfc:`6066` section 3 - Server Name Indication.
1643
Christian Heimes11a14932018-02-24 02:35:08 +01001644 Only one callback can be set per ``SSLContext``. If *sni_callback*
1645 is set to ``None`` then the callback is disabled. Calling this function a
Antoine Pitrou58ddc9d2013-01-05 21:20:29 +01001646 subsequent time will disable the previously registered callback.
1647
Christian Heimes11a14932018-02-24 02:35:08 +01001648 The callback function will be called with three
Antoine Pitrou58ddc9d2013-01-05 21:20:29 +01001649 arguments; the first being the :class:`ssl.SSLSocket`, the second is a string
1650 that represents the server name that the client is intending to communicate
Antoine Pitrou50b24d02013-04-11 20:48:42 +02001651 (or :const:`None` if the TLS Client Hello does not contain a server name)
Antoine Pitrou58ddc9d2013-01-05 21:20:29 +01001652 and the third argument is the original :class:`SSLContext`. The server name
Christian Heimes11a14932018-02-24 02:35:08 +01001653 argument is text. For internationalized domain name, the server
1654 name is an IDN A-label (``"xn--pythn-mua.org"``).
Antoine Pitrou58ddc9d2013-01-05 21:20:29 +01001655
1656 A typical use of this callback is to change the :class:`ssl.SSLSocket`'s
1657 :attr:`SSLSocket.context` attribute to a new object of type
1658 :class:`SSLContext` representing a certificate chain that matches the server
1659 name.
1660
1661 Due to the early negotiation phase of the TLS connection, only limited
1662 methods and attributes are usable like
Benjamin Petersoncca27322015-01-23 16:35:37 -05001663 :meth:`SSLSocket.selected_alpn_protocol` and :attr:`SSLSocket.context`.
Antoine Pitrou58ddc9d2013-01-05 21:20:29 +01001664 :meth:`SSLSocket.getpeercert`, :meth:`SSLSocket.getpeercert`,
1665 :meth:`SSLSocket.cipher` and :meth:`SSLSocket.compress` methods require that
1666 the TLS connection has progressed beyond the TLS Client Hello and therefore
1667 will not contain return meaningful values nor can they be called safely.
1668
Christian Heimes11a14932018-02-24 02:35:08 +01001669 The *sni_callback* function must return ``None`` to allow the
Terry Jan Reedy8e7586b2013-03-11 18:38:13 -04001670 TLS negotiation to continue. If a TLS failure is required, a constant
Antoine Pitrou58ddc9d2013-01-05 21:20:29 +01001671 :const:`ALERT_DESCRIPTION_* <ALERT_DESCRIPTION_INTERNAL_ERROR>` can be
1672 returned. Other return values will result in a TLS fatal error with
1673 :const:`ALERT_DESCRIPTION_INTERNAL_ERROR`.
1674
Christian Heimes11a14932018-02-24 02:35:08 +01001675 If an exception is raised from the *sni_callback* function the TLS
Antoine Pitrou58ddc9d2013-01-05 21:20:29 +01001676 connection will terminate with a fatal TLS alert message
1677 :const:`ALERT_DESCRIPTION_HANDSHAKE_FAILURE`.
1678
1679 This method will raise :exc:`NotImplementedError` if the OpenSSL library
1680 had OPENSSL_NO_TLSEXT defined when it was built.
1681
Christian Heimes11a14932018-02-24 02:35:08 +01001682 .. versionadded:: 3.7
1683
1684.. attribute:: SSLContext.set_servername_callback(server_name_callback)
1685
1686 This is a legacy API retained for backwards compatibility. When possible,
1687 you should use :attr:`sni_callback` instead. The given *server_name_callback*
1688 is similar to *sni_callback*, except that when the server hostname is an
1689 IDN-encoded internationalized domain name, the *server_name_callback*
1690 receives a decoded U-label (``"pythön.org"``).
1691
1692 If there is an decoding error on the server name, the TLS connection will
1693 terminate with an :const:`ALERT_DESCRIPTION_INTERNAL_ERROR` fatal TLS
1694 alert message to the client.
1695
Antoine Pitrou58ddc9d2013-01-05 21:20:29 +01001696 .. versionadded:: 3.4
1697
Antoine Pitrou0e576f12011-12-22 10:03:38 +01001698.. method:: SSLContext.load_dh_params(dhfile)
1699
Matt Eaton9cf8c422018-03-10 19:00:04 -06001700 Load the key generation parameters for Diffie-Hellman (DH) key exchange.
Antoine Pitrou0e576f12011-12-22 10:03:38 +01001701 Using DH key exchange improves forward secrecy at the expense of
1702 computational resources (both on the server and on the client).
1703 The *dhfile* parameter should be the path to a file containing DH
1704 parameters in PEM format.
1705
1706 This setting doesn't apply to client sockets. You can also use the
1707 :data:`OP_SINGLE_DH_USE` option to further improve security.
1708
1709 .. versionadded:: 3.3
1710
Antoine Pitrou923df6f2011-12-19 17:16:51 +01001711.. method:: SSLContext.set_ecdh_curve(curve_name)
1712
Antoine Pitrou0e576f12011-12-22 10:03:38 +01001713 Set the curve name for Elliptic Curve-based Diffie-Hellman (ECDH) key
1714 exchange. ECDH is significantly faster than regular DH while arguably
1715 as secure. The *curve_name* parameter should be a string describing
Antoine Pitrou923df6f2011-12-19 17:16:51 +01001716 a well-known elliptic curve, for example ``prime256v1`` for a widely
1717 supported curve.
1718
1719 This setting doesn't apply to client sockets. You can also use the
1720 :data:`OP_SINGLE_ECDH_USE` option to further improve security.
1721
Serhiy Storchaka4adf01c2016-10-19 18:30:05 +03001722 This method is not available if :data:`HAS_ECDH` is ``False``.
Antoine Pitrou501da612011-12-21 09:27:41 +01001723
Antoine Pitrou923df6f2011-12-19 17:16:51 +01001724 .. versionadded:: 3.3
1725
1726 .. seealso::
Sanyam Khurana1b4587a2017-12-06 22:09:33 +05301727 `SSL/TLS & Perfect Forward Secrecy <https://vincent.bernat.im/en/blog/2011-ssl-perfect-forward-secrecy>`_
Antoine Pitrou923df6f2011-12-19 17:16:51 +01001728 Vincent Bernat.
1729
Antoine Pitroud5323212010-10-22 18:19:07 +00001730.. method:: SSLContext.wrap_socket(sock, server_side=False, \
1731 do_handshake_on_connect=True, suppress_ragged_eofs=True, \
Christian Heimes99a65702016-09-10 23:44:53 +02001732 server_hostname=None, session=None)
Antoine Pitrou152efa22010-05-16 18:19:27 +00001733
Christian Heimes4df60f12017-09-15 20:26:05 +02001734 Wrap an existing Python socket *sock* and return an instance of
Christian Heimes90f05a52018-02-27 09:21:34 +01001735 :attr:`SSLContext.sslsocket_class` (default :class:`SSLSocket`). The
1736 returned SSL socket is tied to the context, its settings and certificates.
1737 *sock* must be a :data:`~socket.SOCK_STREAM` socket; other
1738 socket types are unsupported.
Antoine Pitrou3e86ba42013-12-28 17:26:33 +01001739
Christian Heimes90f05a52018-02-27 09:21:34 +01001740 The parameter ``server_side`` is a boolean which identifies whether
1741 server-side or client-side behavior is desired from this socket.
1742
1743 For client-side sockets, the context construction is lazy; if the
1744 underlying socket isn't connected yet, the context construction will be
1745 performed after :meth:`connect` is called on the socket. For
1746 server-side sockets, if the socket has no remote peer, it is assumed
1747 to be a listening socket, and the server-side SSL wrapping is
1748 automatically performed on client connections accepted via the
1749 :meth:`accept` method. The method may raise :exc:`SSLError`.
Antoine Pitrou152efa22010-05-16 18:19:27 +00001750
Antoine Pitroud5323212010-10-22 18:19:07 +00001751 On client connections, the optional parameter *server_hostname* specifies
1752 the hostname of the service which we are connecting to. This allows a
1753 single server to host multiple SSL-based services with distinct certificates,
Benjamin Peterson7243b572014-11-23 17:04:34 -06001754 quite similarly to HTTP virtual hosts. Specifying *server_hostname* will
1755 raise a :exc:`ValueError` if *server_side* is true.
1756
Christian Heimes90f05a52018-02-27 09:21:34 +01001757 The parameter ``do_handshake_on_connect`` specifies whether to do the SSL
1758 handshake automatically after doing a :meth:`socket.connect`, or whether the
1759 application program will call it explicitly, by invoking the
1760 :meth:`SSLSocket.do_handshake` method. Calling
1761 :meth:`SSLSocket.do_handshake` explicitly gives the program control over the
1762 blocking behavior of the socket I/O involved in the handshake.
1763
1764 The parameter ``suppress_ragged_eofs`` specifies how the
1765 :meth:`SSLSocket.recv` method should signal unexpected EOF from the other end
1766 of the connection. If specified as :const:`True` (the default), it returns a
1767 normal EOF (an empty bytes object) in response to unexpected EOF errors
1768 raised from the underlying socket; if :const:`False`, it will raise the
1769 exceptions back to the caller.
1770
Christian Heimes99a65702016-09-10 23:44:53 +02001771 *session*, see :attr:`~SSLSocket.session`.
1772
Benjamin Peterson7243b572014-11-23 17:04:34 -06001773 .. versionchanged:: 3.5
1774 Always allow a server_hostname to be passed, even if OpenSSL does not
1775 have SNI.
Antoine Pitroud5323212010-10-22 18:19:07 +00001776
Christian Heimes99a65702016-09-10 23:44:53 +02001777 .. versionchanged:: 3.6
1778 *session* argument was added.
1779
Christian Heimes4df60f12017-09-15 20:26:05 +02001780 .. versionchanged:: 3.7
1781 The method returns on instance of :attr:`SSLContext.sslsocket_class`
1782 instead of hard-coded :class:`SSLSocket`.
1783
1784.. attribute:: SSLContext.sslsocket_class
1785
1786 The return type of :meth:`SSLContext.wrap_sockets`, defaults to
1787 :class:`SSLSocket`. The attribute can be overridden on instance of class
1788 in order to return a custom subclass of :class:`SSLSocket`.
1789
1790 .. versionadded:: 3.7
1791
Victor Stinner805b2622014-10-10 12:49:08 +02001792.. method:: SSLContext.wrap_bio(incoming, outgoing, server_side=False, \
Christian Heimes99a65702016-09-10 23:44:53 +02001793 server_hostname=None, session=None)
Victor Stinner805b2622014-10-10 12:49:08 +02001794
Christian Heimes4df60f12017-09-15 20:26:05 +02001795 Wrap the BIO objects *incoming* and *outgoing* and return an instance of
1796 attr:`SSLContext.sslobject_class` (default :class:`SSLObject`). The SSL
1797 routines will read input data from the incoming BIO and write data to the
1798 outgoing BIO.
Victor Stinner805b2622014-10-10 12:49:08 +02001799
Christian Heimes99a65702016-09-10 23:44:53 +02001800 The *server_side*, *server_hostname* and *session* parameters have the
1801 same meaning as in :meth:`SSLContext.wrap_socket`.
1802
1803 .. versionchanged:: 3.6
1804 *session* argument was added.
Victor Stinner805b2622014-10-10 12:49:08 +02001805
Christian Heimes4df60f12017-09-15 20:26:05 +02001806 .. versionchanged:: 3.7
1807 The method returns on instance of :attr:`SSLContext.sslobject_class`
1808 instead of hard-coded :class:`SSLObject`.
1809
1810.. attribute:: SSLContext.sslobject_class
1811
1812 The return type of :meth:`SSLContext.wrap_bio`, defaults to
1813 :class:`SSLObject`. The attribute can be overridden on instance of class
1814 in order to return a custom subclass of :class:`SSLObject`.
1815
1816 .. versionadded:: 3.7
1817
Antoine Pitroub0182c82010-10-12 20:09:02 +00001818.. method:: SSLContext.session_stats()
1819
1820 Get statistics about the SSL sessions created or managed by this context.
Sanyam Khurana338cd832018-01-20 05:55:37 +05301821 A dictionary is returned which maps the names of each `piece of information <https://www.openssl.org/docs/man1.1.0/ssl/SSL_CTX_sess_number.html>`_ to their
Antoine Pitroub0182c82010-10-12 20:09:02 +00001822 numeric values. For example, here is the total number of hits and misses
1823 in the session cache since the context was created::
1824
1825 >>> stats = context.session_stats()
1826 >>> stats['hits'], stats['misses']
1827 (0, 0)
1828
Christian Heimes1aa9a752013-12-02 02:41:19 +01001829.. attribute:: SSLContext.check_hostname
1830
Berker Peksag315e1042015-05-19 01:36:55 +03001831 Whether to match the peer cert's hostname with :func:`match_hostname` in
Christian Heimes1aa9a752013-12-02 02:41:19 +01001832 :meth:`SSLSocket.do_handshake`. The context's
1833 :attr:`~SSLContext.verify_mode` must be set to :data:`CERT_OPTIONAL` or
1834 :data:`CERT_REQUIRED`, and you must pass *server_hostname* to
Christian Heimese82c0342017-09-15 20:29:57 +02001835 :meth:`~SSLContext.wrap_socket` in order to match the hostname. Enabling
1836 hostname checking automatically sets :attr:`~SSLContext.verify_mode` from
1837 :data:`CERT_NONE` to :data:`CERT_REQUIRED`. It cannot be set back to
1838 :data:`CERT_NONE` as long as hostname checking is enabled.
Christian Heimes1aa9a752013-12-02 02:41:19 +01001839
1840 Example::
1841
1842 import socket, ssl
1843
Benjamin Petersone9edee02018-02-20 21:55:01 -08001844 context = ssl.SSLContext()
Christian Heimes1aa9a752013-12-02 02:41:19 +01001845 context.verify_mode = ssl.CERT_REQUIRED
1846 context.check_hostname = True
1847 context.load_default_certs()
1848
1849 s = socket.socket(socket.AF_INET, socket.SOCK_STREAM)
Berker Peksag38bf87c2014-07-17 05:00:36 +03001850 ssl_sock = context.wrap_socket(s, server_hostname='www.verisign.com')
1851 ssl_sock.connect(('www.verisign.com', 443))
Christian Heimes1aa9a752013-12-02 02:41:19 +01001852
1853 .. versionadded:: 3.4
1854
Christian Heimese82c0342017-09-15 20:29:57 +02001855 .. versionchanged:: 3.7
1856
1857 :attr:`~SSLContext.verify_mode` is now automatically changed
1858 to :data:`CERT_REQUIRED` when hostname checking is enabled and
1859 :attr:`~SSLContext.verify_mode` is :data:`CERT_NONE`. Previously
1860 the same operation would have failed with a :exc:`ValueError`.
1861
Christian Heimes1aa9a752013-12-02 02:41:19 +01001862 .. note::
1863
1864 This features requires OpenSSL 0.9.8f or newer.
1865
Christian Heimes698dde12018-02-27 11:54:43 +01001866.. attribute:: SSLContext.maximum_version
1867
1868 A :class:`TLSVersion` enum member representing the highest supported
1869 TLS version. The value defaults to :attr:`TLSVersion.MAXIMUM_SUPPORTED`.
1870 The attribute is read-only for protocols other than :attr:`PROTOCOL_TLS`,
1871 :attr:`PROTOCOL_TLS_CLIENT`, and :attr:`PROTOCOL_TLS_SERVER`.
1872
1873 The attributes :attr:`~SSLContext.maximum_version`,
1874 :attr:`~SSLContext.minimum_version` and
1875 :attr:`SSLContext.options` all affect the supported SSL
1876 and TLS versions of the context. The implementation does not prevent
1877 invalid combination. For example a context with
1878 :attr:`OP_NO_TLSv1_2` in :attr:`~SSLContext.options` and
1879 :attr:`~SSLContext.maximum_version` set to :attr:`TLSVersion.TLSv1_2`
1880 will not be able to establish a TLS 1.2 connection.
1881
1882 .. note::
1883
1884 This attribute is not available unless the ssl module is compiled
1885 with OpenSSL 1.1.0g or newer.
1886
1887.. attribute:: SSLContext.minimum_version
1888
1889 Like :attr:`SSLContext.maximum_version` except it is the lowest
1890 supported version or :attr:`TLSVersion.MINIMUM_SUPPORTED`.
1891
1892 .. note::
1893
1894 This attribute is not available unless the ssl module is compiled
1895 with OpenSSL 1.1.0g or newer.
1896
Antoine Pitroub5218772010-05-21 09:56:06 +00001897.. attribute:: SSLContext.options
1898
1899 An integer representing the set of SSL options enabled on this context.
1900 The default value is :data:`OP_ALL`, but you can specify other options
1901 such as :data:`OP_NO_SSLv2` by ORing them together.
1902
1903 .. note::
1904 With versions of OpenSSL older than 0.9.8m, it is only possible
1905 to set options, not to clear them. Attempting to clear an option
1906 (by resetting the corresponding bits) will raise a ``ValueError``.
1907
Christian Heimes3aeacad2016-09-10 00:19:35 +02001908 .. versionchanged:: 3.6
1909 :attr:`SSLContext.options` returns :class:`Options` flags:
1910
Marco Buttu7b2491a2017-04-13 16:17:59 +02001911 >>> ssl.create_default_context().options # doctest: +SKIP
Christian Heimes3aeacad2016-09-10 00:19:35 +02001912 <Options.OP_ALL|OP_NO_SSLv3|OP_NO_SSLv2|OP_NO_COMPRESSION: 2197947391>
1913
Antoine Pitrou152efa22010-05-16 18:19:27 +00001914.. attribute:: SSLContext.protocol
1915
1916 The protocol version chosen when constructing the context. This attribute
1917 is read-only.
1918
Christian Heimes61d478c2018-01-27 15:51:38 +01001919.. attribute:: SSLContext.hostname_checks_common_name
1920
1921 Whether :attr:`~SSLContext.check_hostname` falls back to verify the cert's
1922 subject common name in the absence of a subject alternative name
1923 extension (default: true).
1924
1925 .. versionadded:: 3.7
1926
1927 .. note::
1928 Only writeable with OpenSSL 1.1.0 or higher.
1929
Christian Heimes22587792013-11-21 23:56:13 +01001930.. attribute:: SSLContext.verify_flags
1931
1932 The flags for certificate verification operations. You can set flags like
1933 :data:`VERIFY_CRL_CHECK_LEAF` by ORing them together. By default OpenSSL
1934 does neither require nor verify certificate revocation lists (CRLs).
Christian Heimes2427b502013-11-23 11:24:32 +01001935 Available only with openssl version 0.9.8+.
Christian Heimes22587792013-11-21 23:56:13 +01001936
1937 .. versionadded:: 3.4
1938
Christian Heimes3aeacad2016-09-10 00:19:35 +02001939 .. versionchanged:: 3.6
1940 :attr:`SSLContext.verify_flags` returns :class:`VerifyFlags` flags:
1941
Marco Buttu7b2491a2017-04-13 16:17:59 +02001942 >>> ssl.create_default_context().verify_flags # doctest: +SKIP
Christian Heimes3aeacad2016-09-10 00:19:35 +02001943 <VerifyFlags.VERIFY_X509_TRUSTED_FIRST: 32768>
1944
Antoine Pitrou152efa22010-05-16 18:19:27 +00001945.. attribute:: SSLContext.verify_mode
1946
1947 Whether to try to verify other peers' certificates and how to behave
1948 if verification fails. This attribute must be one of
1949 :data:`CERT_NONE`, :data:`CERT_OPTIONAL` or :data:`CERT_REQUIRED`.
1950
Christian Heimes3aeacad2016-09-10 00:19:35 +02001951 .. versionchanged:: 3.6
1952 :attr:`SSLContext.verify_mode` returns :class:`VerifyMode` enum:
1953
1954 >>> ssl.create_default_context().verify_mode
1955 <VerifyMode.CERT_REQUIRED: 2>
Antoine Pitrou152efa22010-05-16 18:19:27 +00001956
Thomas Wouters1b7f8912007-09-19 03:06:30 +00001957.. index:: single: certificates
1958
1959.. index:: single: X509 certificate
1960
Thomas Wouters47b49bf2007-08-30 22:15:33 +00001961.. _ssl-certificates:
1962
Thomas Woutersed03b412007-08-28 21:37:11 +00001963Certificates
1964------------
1965
Georg Brandl7f01a132009-09-16 15:58:14 +00001966Certificates in general are part of a public-key / private-key system. In this
1967system, each *principal*, (which may be a machine, or a person, or an
1968organization) is assigned a unique two-part encryption key. One part of the key
1969is public, and is called the *public key*; the other part is kept secret, and is
1970called the *private key*. The two parts are related, in that if you encrypt a
1971message with one of the parts, you can decrypt it with the other part, and
1972**only** with the other part.
Thomas Woutersed03b412007-08-28 21:37:11 +00001973
Georg Brandl7f01a132009-09-16 15:58:14 +00001974A certificate contains information about two principals. It contains the name
1975of a *subject*, and the subject's public key. It also contains a statement by a
1976second principal, the *issuer*, that the subject is who he claims to be, and
1977that this is indeed the subject's public key. The issuer's statement is signed
1978with the issuer's private key, which only the issuer knows. However, anyone can
1979verify the issuer's statement by finding the issuer's public key, decrypting the
1980statement with it, and comparing it to the other information in the certificate.
1981The certificate also contains information about the time period over which it is
1982valid. This is expressed as two fields, called "notBefore" and "notAfter".
Thomas Woutersed03b412007-08-28 21:37:11 +00001983
Georg Brandl7f01a132009-09-16 15:58:14 +00001984In the Python use of certificates, a client or server can use a certificate to
1985prove who they are. The other side of a network connection can also be required
1986to produce a certificate, and that certificate can be validated to the
1987satisfaction of the client or server that requires such validation. The
1988connection attempt can be set to raise an exception if the validation fails.
1989Validation is done automatically, by the underlying OpenSSL framework; the
1990application need not concern itself with its mechanics. But the application
1991does usually need to provide sets of certificates to allow this process to take
1992place.
Thomas Wouters47b49bf2007-08-30 22:15:33 +00001993
Georg Brandl7f01a132009-09-16 15:58:14 +00001994Python uses files to contain certificates. They should be formatted as "PEM"
1995(see :rfc:`1422`), which is a base-64 encoded form wrapped with a header line
1996and a footer line::
Thomas Wouters47b49bf2007-08-30 22:15:33 +00001997
1998 -----BEGIN CERTIFICATE-----
1999 ... (certificate in base64 PEM encoding) ...
2000 -----END CERTIFICATE-----
2001
Antoine Pitrou152efa22010-05-16 18:19:27 +00002002Certificate chains
2003^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2004
Georg Brandl7f01a132009-09-16 15:58:14 +00002005The Python files which contain certificates can contain a sequence of
2006certificates, sometimes called a *certificate chain*. This chain should start
2007with the specific certificate for the principal who "is" the client or server,
2008and then the certificate for the issuer of that certificate, and then the
2009certificate for the issuer of *that* certificate, and so on up the chain till
2010you get to a certificate which is *self-signed*, that is, a certificate which
2011has the same subject and issuer, sometimes called a *root certificate*. The
2012certificates should just be concatenated together in the certificate file. For
2013example, suppose we had a three certificate chain, from our server certificate
2014to the certificate of the certification authority that signed our server
2015certificate, to the root certificate of the agency which issued the
2016certification authority's certificate::
Thomas Wouters47b49bf2007-08-30 22:15:33 +00002017
2018 -----BEGIN CERTIFICATE-----
2019 ... (certificate for your server)...
2020 -----END CERTIFICATE-----
2021 -----BEGIN CERTIFICATE-----
2022 ... (the certificate for the CA)...
2023 -----END CERTIFICATE-----
2024 -----BEGIN CERTIFICATE-----
2025 ... (the root certificate for the CA's issuer)...
2026 -----END CERTIFICATE-----
2027
Antoine Pitrou152efa22010-05-16 18:19:27 +00002028CA certificates
2029^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2030
Thomas Wouters47b49bf2007-08-30 22:15:33 +00002031If you are going to require validation of the other side of the connection's
2032certificate, you need to provide a "CA certs" file, filled with the certificate
Georg Brandl7f01a132009-09-16 15:58:14 +00002033chains for each issuer you are willing to trust. Again, this file just contains
2034these chains concatenated together. For validation, Python will use the first
Donald Stufft41374652014-03-24 19:26:03 -04002035chain it finds in the file which matches. The platform's certificates file can
2036be used by calling :meth:`SSLContext.load_default_certs`, this is done
2037automatically with :func:`.create_default_context`.
Thomas Woutersed03b412007-08-28 21:37:11 +00002038
Antoine Pitrou152efa22010-05-16 18:19:27 +00002039Combined key and certificate
2040^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2041
2042Often the private key is stored in the same file as the certificate; in this
2043case, only the ``certfile`` parameter to :meth:`SSLContext.load_cert_chain`
2044and :func:`wrap_socket` needs to be passed. If the private key is stored
2045with the certificate, it should come before the first certificate in
2046the certificate chain::
2047
2048 -----BEGIN RSA PRIVATE KEY-----
2049 ... (private key in base64 encoding) ...
2050 -----END RSA PRIVATE KEY-----
2051 -----BEGIN CERTIFICATE-----
2052 ... (certificate in base64 PEM encoding) ...
2053 -----END CERTIFICATE-----
2054
2055Self-signed certificates
2056^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2057
Georg Brandl7f01a132009-09-16 15:58:14 +00002058If you are going to create a server that provides SSL-encrypted connection
2059services, you will need to acquire a certificate for that service. There are
2060many ways of acquiring appropriate certificates, such as buying one from a
2061certification authority. Another common practice is to generate a self-signed
2062certificate. The simplest way to do this is with the OpenSSL package, using
2063something like the following::
Thomas Woutersed03b412007-08-28 21:37:11 +00002064
Thomas Wouters1b7f8912007-09-19 03:06:30 +00002065 % openssl req -new -x509 -days 365 -nodes -out cert.pem -keyout cert.pem
2066 Generating a 1024 bit RSA private key
2067 .......++++++
2068 .............................++++++
2069 writing new private key to 'cert.pem'
2070 -----
2071 You are about to be asked to enter information that will be incorporated
2072 into your certificate request.
2073 What you are about to enter is what is called a Distinguished Name or a DN.
2074 There are quite a few fields but you can leave some blank
2075 For some fields there will be a default value,
2076 If you enter '.', the field will be left blank.
2077 -----
2078 Country Name (2 letter code) [AU]:US
2079 State or Province Name (full name) [Some-State]:MyState
2080 Locality Name (eg, city) []:Some City
2081 Organization Name (eg, company) [Internet Widgits Pty Ltd]:My Organization, Inc.
2082 Organizational Unit Name (eg, section) []:My Group
2083 Common Name (eg, YOUR name) []:myserver.mygroup.myorganization.com
2084 Email Address []:ops@myserver.mygroup.myorganization.com
2085 %
Thomas Woutersed03b412007-08-28 21:37:11 +00002086
Georg Brandl7f01a132009-09-16 15:58:14 +00002087The disadvantage of a self-signed certificate is that it is its own root
2088certificate, and no one else will have it in their cache of known (and trusted)
2089root certificates.
Thomas Wouters47b49bf2007-08-30 22:15:33 +00002090
2091
Thomas Woutersed03b412007-08-28 21:37:11 +00002092Examples
2093--------
2094
Thomas Wouters47b49bf2007-08-30 22:15:33 +00002095Testing for SSL support
2096^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2097
Georg Brandl7f01a132009-09-16 15:58:14 +00002098To test for the presence of SSL support in a Python installation, user code
2099should use the following idiom::
Thomas Wouters47b49bf2007-08-30 22:15:33 +00002100
2101 try:
Georg Brandl8a7e5da2011-01-02 19:07:51 +00002102 import ssl
Thomas Wouters47b49bf2007-08-30 22:15:33 +00002103 except ImportError:
Georg Brandl8a7e5da2011-01-02 19:07:51 +00002104 pass
Thomas Wouters47b49bf2007-08-30 22:15:33 +00002105 else:
Serhiy Storchakadba90392016-05-10 12:01:23 +03002106 ... # do something that requires SSL support
Thomas Wouters47b49bf2007-08-30 22:15:33 +00002107
2108Client-side operation
2109^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2110
Antoine Pitrou4b4ddb22014-10-21 00:14:39 +02002111This example creates a SSL context with the recommended security settings
2112for client sockets, including automatic certificate verification::
Thomas Woutersed03b412007-08-28 21:37:11 +00002113
Antoine Pitrou4b4ddb22014-10-21 00:14:39 +02002114 >>> context = ssl.create_default_context()
Thomas Woutersed03b412007-08-28 21:37:11 +00002115
Antoine Pitrou4b4ddb22014-10-21 00:14:39 +02002116If you prefer to tune security settings yourself, you might create
2117a context from scratch (but beware that you might not get the settings
2118right)::
Antoine Pitrou152efa22010-05-16 18:19:27 +00002119
Benjamin Petersone9edee02018-02-20 21:55:01 -08002120 >>> context = ssl.SSLContext()
Antoine Pitrou59fdd672010-10-08 10:37:08 +00002121 >>> context.verify_mode = ssl.CERT_REQUIRED
Antoine Pitrou4b4ddb22014-10-21 00:14:39 +02002122 >>> context.check_hostname = True
Antoine Pitrou152efa22010-05-16 18:19:27 +00002123 >>> context.load_verify_locations("/etc/ssl/certs/ca-bundle.crt")
2124
Antoine Pitrou4b4ddb22014-10-21 00:14:39 +02002125(this snippet assumes your operating system places a bundle of all CA
2126certificates in ``/etc/ssl/certs/ca-bundle.crt``; if not, you'll get an
2127error and have to adjust the location)
Antoine Pitrou152efa22010-05-16 18:19:27 +00002128
Antoine Pitrou59fdd672010-10-08 10:37:08 +00002129When you use the context to connect to a server, :const:`CERT_REQUIRED`
Antoine Pitrou152efa22010-05-16 18:19:27 +00002130validates the server certificate: it ensures that the server certificate
2131was signed with one of the CA certificates, and checks the signature for
2132correctness::
2133
Antoine Pitrou4b4ddb22014-10-21 00:14:39 +02002134 >>> conn = context.wrap_socket(socket.socket(socket.AF_INET),
2135 ... server_hostname="www.python.org")
2136 >>> conn.connect(("www.python.org", 443))
Antoine Pitrou152efa22010-05-16 18:19:27 +00002137
Antoine Pitrou4b4ddb22014-10-21 00:14:39 +02002138You may then fetch the certificate::
Antoine Pitrou152efa22010-05-16 18:19:27 +00002139
Antoine Pitrou59fdd672010-10-08 10:37:08 +00002140 >>> cert = conn.getpeercert()
Antoine Pitrou59fdd672010-10-08 10:37:08 +00002141
2142Visual inspection shows that the certificate does identify the desired service
Antoine Pitrou4b4ddb22014-10-21 00:14:39 +02002143(that is, the HTTPS host ``www.python.org``)::
Antoine Pitrou59fdd672010-10-08 10:37:08 +00002144
2145 >>> pprint.pprint(cert)
Antoine Pitrou4b4ddb22014-10-21 00:14:39 +02002146 {'OCSP': ('http://ocsp.digicert.com',),
2147 'caIssuers': ('http://cacerts.digicert.com/DigiCertSHA2ExtendedValidationServerCA.crt',),
2148 'crlDistributionPoints': ('http://crl3.digicert.com/sha2-ev-server-g1.crl',
2149 'http://crl4.digicert.com/sha2-ev-server-g1.crl'),
2150 'issuer': ((('countryName', 'US'),),
2151 (('organizationName', 'DigiCert Inc'),),
2152 (('organizationalUnitName', 'www.digicert.com'),),
2153 (('commonName', 'DigiCert SHA2 Extended Validation Server CA'),)),
2154 'notAfter': 'Sep 9 12:00:00 2016 GMT',
2155 'notBefore': 'Sep 5 00:00:00 2014 GMT',
2156 'serialNumber': '01BB6F00122B177F36CAB49CEA8B6B26',
2157 'subject': ((('businessCategory', 'Private Organization'),),
2158 (('1.3.6.1.4.1.311.60.2.1.3', 'US'),),
2159 (('1.3.6.1.4.1.311.60.2.1.2', 'Delaware'),),
2160 (('serialNumber', '3359300'),),
2161 (('streetAddress', '16 Allen Rd'),),
2162 (('postalCode', '03894-4801'),),
2163 (('countryName', 'US'),),
2164 (('stateOrProvinceName', 'NH'),),
2165 (('localityName', 'Wolfeboro,'),),
2166 (('organizationName', 'Python Software Foundation'),),
2167 (('commonName', 'www.python.org'),)),
2168 'subjectAltName': (('DNS', 'www.python.org'),
2169 ('DNS', 'python.org'),
Stéphane Wirtel19177fb2018-05-15 20:58:35 +02002170 ('DNS', 'pypi.org'),
Antoine Pitrou4b4ddb22014-10-21 00:14:39 +02002171 ('DNS', 'docs.python.org'),
Stéphane Wirtel19177fb2018-05-15 20:58:35 +02002172 ('DNS', 'testpypi.org'),
Antoine Pitrou4b4ddb22014-10-21 00:14:39 +02002173 ('DNS', 'bugs.python.org'),
2174 ('DNS', 'wiki.python.org'),
2175 ('DNS', 'hg.python.org'),
2176 ('DNS', 'mail.python.org'),
2177 ('DNS', 'packaging.python.org'),
2178 ('DNS', 'pythonhosted.org'),
2179 ('DNS', 'www.pythonhosted.org'),
2180 ('DNS', 'test.pythonhosted.org'),
2181 ('DNS', 'us.pycon.org'),
2182 ('DNS', 'id.python.org')),
Antoine Pitrou441ae042012-01-06 20:06:15 +01002183 'version': 3}
Antoine Pitrou152efa22010-05-16 18:19:27 +00002184
Antoine Pitrou4b4ddb22014-10-21 00:14:39 +02002185Now the SSL channel is established and the certificate verified, you can
2186proceed to talk with the server::
Antoine Pitrou152efa22010-05-16 18:19:27 +00002187
Antoine Pitroudab64262010-09-19 13:31:06 +00002188 >>> conn.sendall(b"HEAD / HTTP/1.0\r\nHost: linuxfr.org\r\n\r\n")
2189 >>> pprint.pprint(conn.recv(1024).split(b"\r\n"))
Antoine Pitrou4b4ddb22014-10-21 00:14:39 +02002190 [b'HTTP/1.1 200 OK',
2191 b'Date: Sat, 18 Oct 2014 18:27:20 GMT',
2192 b'Server: nginx',
2193 b'Content-Type: text/html; charset=utf-8',
2194 b'X-Frame-Options: SAMEORIGIN',
2195 b'Content-Length: 45679',
2196 b'Accept-Ranges: bytes',
2197 b'Via: 1.1 varnish',
2198 b'Age: 2188',
2199 b'X-Served-By: cache-lcy1134-LCY',
2200 b'X-Cache: HIT',
2201 b'X-Cache-Hits: 11',
2202 b'Vary: Cookie',
2203 b'Strict-Transport-Security: max-age=63072000; includeSubDomains',
Antoine Pitrou152efa22010-05-16 18:19:27 +00002204 b'Connection: close',
Antoine Pitrou152efa22010-05-16 18:19:27 +00002205 b'',
2206 b'']
2207
Antoine Pitrou152efa22010-05-16 18:19:27 +00002208See the discussion of :ref:`ssl-security` below.
2209
2210
Thomas Wouters47b49bf2007-08-30 22:15:33 +00002211Server-side operation
2212^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2213
Antoine Pitrou152efa22010-05-16 18:19:27 +00002214For server operation, typically you'll need to have a server certificate, and
2215private key, each in a file. You'll first create a context holding the key
2216and the certificate, so that clients can check your authenticity. Then
2217you'll open a socket, bind it to a port, call :meth:`listen` on it, and start
2218waiting for clients to connect::
Thomas Woutersed03b412007-08-28 21:37:11 +00002219
2220 import socket, ssl
2221
Antoine Pitrou4b4ddb22014-10-21 00:14:39 +02002222 context = ssl.create_default_context(ssl.Purpose.CLIENT_AUTH)
Antoine Pitrou152efa22010-05-16 18:19:27 +00002223 context.load_cert_chain(certfile="mycertfile", keyfile="mykeyfile")
2224
Thomas Woutersed03b412007-08-28 21:37:11 +00002225 bindsocket = socket.socket()
2226 bindsocket.bind(('myaddr.mydomain.com', 10023))
2227 bindsocket.listen(5)
2228
Antoine Pitrou152efa22010-05-16 18:19:27 +00002229When a client connects, you'll call :meth:`accept` on the socket to get the
2230new socket from the other end, and use the context's :meth:`SSLContext.wrap_socket`
2231method to create a server-side SSL socket for the connection::
Thomas Woutersed03b412007-08-28 21:37:11 +00002232
2233 while True:
Georg Brandl8a7e5da2011-01-02 19:07:51 +00002234 newsocket, fromaddr = bindsocket.accept()
2235 connstream = context.wrap_socket(newsocket, server_side=True)
2236 try:
2237 deal_with_client(connstream)
2238 finally:
Antoine Pitroub205d582011-01-02 22:09:27 +00002239 connstream.shutdown(socket.SHUT_RDWR)
Georg Brandl8a7e5da2011-01-02 19:07:51 +00002240 connstream.close()
Thomas Woutersed03b412007-08-28 21:37:11 +00002241
Antoine Pitrou152efa22010-05-16 18:19:27 +00002242Then you'll read data from the ``connstream`` and do something with it till you
Georg Brandl7f01a132009-09-16 15:58:14 +00002243are finished with the client (or the client is finished with you)::
Thomas Woutersed03b412007-08-28 21:37:11 +00002244
2245 def deal_with_client(connstream):
Georg Brandl8a7e5da2011-01-02 19:07:51 +00002246 data = connstream.recv(1024)
2247 # empty data means the client is finished with us
2248 while data:
2249 if not do_something(connstream, data):
2250 # we'll assume do_something returns False
2251 # when we're finished with client
2252 break
2253 data = connstream.recv(1024)
2254 # finished with client
Thomas Woutersed03b412007-08-28 21:37:11 +00002255
Antoine Pitrou152efa22010-05-16 18:19:27 +00002256And go back to listening for new client connections (of course, a real server
2257would probably handle each client connection in a separate thread, or put
Victor Stinner29611452014-10-10 12:52:43 +02002258the sockets in :ref:`non-blocking mode <ssl-nonblocking>` and use an event loop).
Antoine Pitrou152efa22010-05-16 18:19:27 +00002259
2260
Antoine Pitrou6f5dcb12011-07-11 01:35:48 +02002261.. _ssl-nonblocking:
2262
2263Notes on non-blocking sockets
2264-----------------------------
2265
Antoine Pitroub4bebda2014-04-29 10:03:28 +02002266SSL sockets behave slightly different than regular sockets in
2267non-blocking mode. When working with non-blocking sockets, there are
2268thus several things you need to be aware of:
2269
2270- Most :class:`SSLSocket` methods will raise either
2271 :exc:`SSLWantWriteError` or :exc:`SSLWantReadError` instead of
2272 :exc:`BlockingIOError` if an I/O operation would
2273 block. :exc:`SSLWantReadError` will be raised if a read operation on
2274 the underlying socket is necessary, and :exc:`SSLWantWriteError` for
2275 a write operation on the underlying socket. Note that attempts to
2276 *write* to an SSL socket may require *reading* from the underlying
2277 socket first, and attempts to *read* from the SSL socket may require
2278 a prior *write* to the underlying socket.
2279
2280 .. versionchanged:: 3.5
2281
2282 In earlier Python versions, the :meth:`!SSLSocket.send` method
2283 returned zero instead of raising :exc:`SSLWantWriteError` or
2284 :exc:`SSLWantReadError`.
Antoine Pitrou6f5dcb12011-07-11 01:35:48 +02002285
2286- Calling :func:`~select.select` tells you that the OS-level socket can be
2287 read from (or written to), but it does not imply that there is sufficient
2288 data at the upper SSL layer. For example, only part of an SSL frame might
2289 have arrived. Therefore, you must be ready to handle :meth:`SSLSocket.recv`
2290 and :meth:`SSLSocket.send` failures, and retry after another call to
2291 :func:`~select.select`.
2292
Antoine Pitrou75e03382014-05-18 00:55:13 +02002293- Conversely, since the SSL layer has its own framing, a SSL socket may
2294 still have data available for reading without :func:`~select.select`
2295 being aware of it. Therefore, you should first call
2296 :meth:`SSLSocket.recv` to drain any potentially available data, and then
2297 only block on a :func:`~select.select` call if still necessary.
2298
Antoine Pitrou6f5dcb12011-07-11 01:35:48 +02002299 (of course, similar provisions apply when using other primitives such as
Antoine Pitrou75e03382014-05-18 00:55:13 +02002300 :func:`~select.poll`, or those in the :mod:`selectors` module)
Antoine Pitrou6f5dcb12011-07-11 01:35:48 +02002301
2302- The SSL handshake itself will be non-blocking: the
2303 :meth:`SSLSocket.do_handshake` method has to be retried until it returns
2304 successfully. Here is a synopsis using :func:`~select.select` to wait for
2305 the socket's readiness::
2306
2307 while True:
2308 try:
2309 sock.do_handshake()
2310 break
Antoine Pitrou873bf262011-10-27 23:59:03 +02002311 except ssl.SSLWantReadError:
2312 select.select([sock], [], [])
2313 except ssl.SSLWantWriteError:
2314 select.select([], [sock], [])
Antoine Pitrou6f5dcb12011-07-11 01:35:48 +02002315
Victor Stinnercfb2a0a2014-10-10 12:45:10 +02002316.. seealso::
2317
Victor Stinner29611452014-10-10 12:52:43 +02002318 The :mod:`asyncio` module supports :ref:`non-blocking SSL sockets
2319 <ssl-nonblocking>` and provides a
Victor Stinnercfb2a0a2014-10-10 12:45:10 +02002320 higher level API. It polls for events using the :mod:`selectors` module and
2321 handles :exc:`SSLWantWriteError`, :exc:`SSLWantReadError` and
2322 :exc:`BlockingIOError` exceptions. It runs the SSL handshake asynchronously
2323 as well.
2324
Antoine Pitrou6f5dcb12011-07-11 01:35:48 +02002325
Antoine Pitroub1fdf472014-10-05 20:41:53 +02002326Memory BIO Support
2327------------------
2328
2329.. versionadded:: 3.5
2330
2331Ever since the SSL module was introduced in Python 2.6, the :class:`SSLSocket`
2332class has provided two related but distinct areas of functionality:
2333
2334- SSL protocol handling
2335- Network IO
2336
2337The network IO API is identical to that provided by :class:`socket.socket`,
2338from which :class:`SSLSocket` also inherits. This allows an SSL socket to be
2339used as a drop-in replacement for a regular socket, making it very easy to add
2340SSL support to an existing application.
2341
2342Combining SSL protocol handling and network IO usually works well, but there
2343are some cases where it doesn't. An example is async IO frameworks that want to
2344use a different IO multiplexing model than the "select/poll on a file
2345descriptor" (readiness based) model that is assumed by :class:`socket.socket`
2346and by the internal OpenSSL socket IO routines. This is mostly relevant for
2347platforms like Windows where this model is not efficient. For this purpose, a
2348reduced scope variant of :class:`SSLSocket` called :class:`SSLObject` is
2349provided.
2350
2351.. class:: SSLObject
2352
2353 A reduced-scope variant of :class:`SSLSocket` representing an SSL protocol
Victor Stinner2debf152014-10-10 13:04:08 +02002354 instance that does not contain any network IO methods. This class is
2355 typically used by framework authors that want to implement asynchronous IO
2356 for SSL through memory buffers.
Antoine Pitroub1fdf472014-10-05 20:41:53 +02002357
Victor Stinner2debf152014-10-10 13:04:08 +02002358 This class implements an interface on top of a low-level SSL object as
2359 implemented by OpenSSL. This object captures the state of an SSL connection
2360 but does not provide any network IO itself. IO needs to be performed through
2361 separate "BIO" objects which are OpenSSL's IO abstraction layer.
2362
Christian Heimes9d50ab52018-02-27 10:17:30 +01002363 This class has no public constructor. An :class:`SSLObject` instance
2364 must be created using the :meth:`~SSLContext.wrap_bio` method. This
2365 method will create the :class:`SSLObject` instance and bind it to a
2366 pair of BIOs. The *incoming* BIO is used to pass data from Python to the
2367 SSL protocol instance, while the *outgoing* BIO is used to pass data the
2368 other way around.
Victor Stinner2debf152014-10-10 13:04:08 +02002369
2370 The following methods are available:
Antoine Pitroub1fdf472014-10-05 20:41:53 +02002371
Victor Stinner805b2622014-10-10 12:49:08 +02002372 - :attr:`~SSLSocket.context`
2373 - :attr:`~SSLSocket.server_side`
2374 - :attr:`~SSLSocket.server_hostname`
Christian Heimes99a65702016-09-10 23:44:53 +02002375 - :attr:`~SSLSocket.session`
2376 - :attr:`~SSLSocket.session_reused`
Victor Stinner805b2622014-10-10 12:49:08 +02002377 - :meth:`~SSLSocket.read`
2378 - :meth:`~SSLSocket.write`
2379 - :meth:`~SSLSocket.getpeercert`
2380 - :meth:`~SSLSocket.selected_npn_protocol`
2381 - :meth:`~SSLSocket.cipher`
Benjamin Peterson4cb17812015-01-07 11:14:26 -06002382 - :meth:`~SSLSocket.shared_ciphers`
Victor Stinner805b2622014-10-10 12:49:08 +02002383 - :meth:`~SSLSocket.compression`
2384 - :meth:`~SSLSocket.pending`
2385 - :meth:`~SSLSocket.do_handshake`
2386 - :meth:`~SSLSocket.unwrap`
2387 - :meth:`~SSLSocket.get_channel_binding`
Antoine Pitroub1fdf472014-10-05 20:41:53 +02002388
Victor Stinner2debf152014-10-10 13:04:08 +02002389 When compared to :class:`SSLSocket`, this object lacks the following
2390 features:
Antoine Pitroub1fdf472014-10-05 20:41:53 +02002391
Benjamin Petersonfdfca5f2017-06-11 00:24:38 -07002392 - Any form of network IO; ``recv()`` and ``send()`` read and write only to
2393 the underlying :class:`MemoryBIO` buffers.
Antoine Pitroub1fdf472014-10-05 20:41:53 +02002394
Victor Stinner2debf152014-10-10 13:04:08 +02002395 - There is no *do_handshake_on_connect* machinery. You must always manually
2396 call :meth:`~SSLSocket.do_handshake` to start the handshake.
Antoine Pitroub1fdf472014-10-05 20:41:53 +02002397
Victor Stinner2debf152014-10-10 13:04:08 +02002398 - There is no handling of *suppress_ragged_eofs*. All end-of-file conditions
2399 that are in violation of the protocol are reported via the
2400 :exc:`SSLEOFError` exception.
Antoine Pitroub1fdf472014-10-05 20:41:53 +02002401
Victor Stinner2debf152014-10-10 13:04:08 +02002402 - The method :meth:`~SSLSocket.unwrap` call does not return anything,
2403 unlike for an SSL socket where it returns the underlying socket.
Antoine Pitroub1fdf472014-10-05 20:41:53 +02002404
Victor Stinner2debf152014-10-10 13:04:08 +02002405 - The *server_name_callback* callback passed to
2406 :meth:`SSLContext.set_servername_callback` will get an :class:`SSLObject`
2407 instance instead of a :class:`SSLSocket` instance as its first parameter.
Antoine Pitroub1fdf472014-10-05 20:41:53 +02002408
Victor Stinner2debf152014-10-10 13:04:08 +02002409 Some notes related to the use of :class:`SSLObject`:
Antoine Pitroub1fdf472014-10-05 20:41:53 +02002410
Victor Stinner2debf152014-10-10 13:04:08 +02002411 - All IO on an :class:`SSLObject` is :ref:`non-blocking <ssl-nonblocking>`.
2412 This means that for example :meth:`~SSLSocket.read` will raise an
2413 :exc:`SSLWantReadError` if it needs more data than the incoming BIO has
2414 available.
2415
2416 - There is no module-level ``wrap_bio()`` call like there is for
2417 :meth:`~SSLContext.wrap_socket`. An :class:`SSLObject` is always created
2418 via an :class:`SSLContext`.
Antoine Pitroub1fdf472014-10-05 20:41:53 +02002419
Christian Heimes9d50ab52018-02-27 10:17:30 +01002420 .. versionchanged:: 3.7
2421 :class:`SSLObject` instances must to created with
2422 :meth:`~SSLContext.wrap_bio`. In earlier versions, it was possible to
2423 create instances directly. This was never documented or officially
2424 supported.
2425
Victor Stinner805b2622014-10-10 12:49:08 +02002426An SSLObject communicates with the outside world using memory buffers. The
2427class :class:`MemoryBIO` provides a memory buffer that can be used for this
2428purpose. It wraps an OpenSSL memory BIO (Basic IO) object:
2429
2430.. class:: MemoryBIO
2431
2432 A memory buffer that can be used to pass data between Python and an SSL
2433 protocol instance.
2434
2435 .. attribute:: MemoryBIO.pending
2436
2437 Return the number of bytes currently in the memory buffer.
2438
2439 .. attribute:: MemoryBIO.eof
2440
2441 A boolean indicating whether the memory BIO is current at the end-of-file
2442 position.
2443
2444 .. method:: MemoryBIO.read(n=-1)
2445
2446 Read up to *n* bytes from the memory buffer. If *n* is not specified or
2447 negative, all bytes are returned.
2448
2449 .. method:: MemoryBIO.write(buf)
2450
2451 Write the bytes from *buf* to the memory BIO. The *buf* argument must be an
2452 object supporting the buffer protocol.
2453
2454 The return value is the number of bytes written, which is always equal to
2455 the length of *buf*.
2456
2457 .. method:: MemoryBIO.write_eof()
2458
2459 Write an EOF marker to the memory BIO. After this method has been called, it
2460 is illegal to call :meth:`~MemoryBIO.write`. The attribute :attr:`eof` will
2461 become true after all data currently in the buffer has been read.
2462
Antoine Pitroub1fdf472014-10-05 20:41:53 +02002463
Christian Heimes99a65702016-09-10 23:44:53 +02002464SSL session
2465-----------
2466
2467.. versionadded:: 3.6
2468
2469.. class:: SSLSession
2470
2471 Session object used by :attr:`~SSLSocket.session`.
2472
2473 .. attribute:: id
2474 .. attribute:: time
2475 .. attribute:: timeout
2476 .. attribute:: ticket_lifetime_hint
2477 .. attribute:: has_ticket
2478
2479
Antoine Pitrou152efa22010-05-16 18:19:27 +00002480.. _ssl-security:
2481
2482Security considerations
2483-----------------------
2484
Antoine Pitrouc5e075f2014-03-22 18:19:11 +01002485Best defaults
2486^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Antoine Pitrou152efa22010-05-16 18:19:27 +00002487
Antoine Pitrouc5e075f2014-03-22 18:19:11 +01002488For **client use**, if you don't have any special requirements for your
2489security policy, it is highly recommended that you use the
2490:func:`create_default_context` function to create your SSL context.
2491It will load the system's trusted CA certificates, enable certificate
Antoine Pitrouf8cbbbb2014-03-23 16:31:08 +01002492validation and hostname checking, and try to choose reasonably secure
2493protocol and cipher settings.
Antoine Pitrouc5e075f2014-03-22 18:19:11 +01002494
2495For example, here is how you would use the :class:`smtplib.SMTP` class to
2496create a trusted, secure connection to a SMTP server::
2497
2498 >>> import ssl, smtplib
2499 >>> smtp = smtplib.SMTP("mail.python.org", port=587)
2500 >>> context = ssl.create_default_context()
2501 >>> smtp.starttls(context=context)
2502 (220, b'2.0.0 Ready to start TLS')
2503
2504If a client certificate is needed for the connection, it can be added with
2505:meth:`SSLContext.load_cert_chain`.
2506
2507By contrast, if you create the SSL context by calling the :class:`SSLContext`
Antoine Pitrouf8cbbbb2014-03-23 16:31:08 +01002508constructor yourself, it will not have certificate validation nor hostname
2509checking enabled by default. If you do so, please read the paragraphs below
2510to achieve a good security level.
Antoine Pitrouc5e075f2014-03-22 18:19:11 +01002511
2512Manual settings
2513^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2514
2515Verifying certificates
2516''''''''''''''''''''''
2517
Donald Stufft8b852f12014-05-20 12:58:38 -04002518When calling the :class:`SSLContext` constructor directly,
Antoine Pitrou152efa22010-05-16 18:19:27 +00002519:const:`CERT_NONE` is the default. Since it does not authenticate the other
2520peer, it can be insecure, especially in client mode where most of time you
2521would like to ensure the authenticity of the server you're talking to.
2522Therefore, when in client mode, it is highly recommended to use
2523:const:`CERT_REQUIRED`. However, it is in itself not sufficient; you also
Antoine Pitrou59fdd672010-10-08 10:37:08 +00002524have to check that the server certificate, which can be obtained by calling
2525:meth:`SSLSocket.getpeercert`, matches the desired service. For many
2526protocols and applications, the service can be identified by the hostname;
Christian Heimes1aa9a752013-12-02 02:41:19 +01002527in this case, the :func:`match_hostname` function can be used. This common
2528check is automatically performed when :attr:`SSLContext.check_hostname` is
2529enabled.
Antoine Pitrou152efa22010-05-16 18:19:27 +00002530
Christian Heimes61d478c2018-01-27 15:51:38 +01002531.. versionchanged:: 3.7
2532 Hostname matchings is now performed by OpenSSL. Python no longer uses
2533 :func:`match_hostname`.
2534
Antoine Pitrou152efa22010-05-16 18:19:27 +00002535In server mode, if you want to authenticate your clients using the SSL layer
2536(rather than using a higher-level authentication mechanism), you'll also have
2537to specify :const:`CERT_REQUIRED` and similarly check the client certificate.
2538
2539 .. note::
2540
2541 In client mode, :const:`CERT_OPTIONAL` and :const:`CERT_REQUIRED` are
2542 equivalent unless anonymous ciphers are enabled (they are disabled
2543 by default).
Thomas Woutersed03b412007-08-28 21:37:11 +00002544
Antoine Pitroub5218772010-05-21 09:56:06 +00002545Protocol versions
Antoine Pitrouc5e075f2014-03-22 18:19:11 +01002546'''''''''''''''''
Antoine Pitroub5218772010-05-21 09:56:06 +00002547
Antoine Pitrou4b4ddb22014-10-21 00:14:39 +02002548SSL versions 2 and 3 are considered insecure and are therefore dangerous to
2549use. If you want maximum compatibility between clients and servers, it is
Christian Heimes5fe668c2016-09-12 00:01:11 +02002550recommended to use :const:`PROTOCOL_TLS_CLIENT` or
2551:const:`PROTOCOL_TLS_SERVER` as the protocol version. SSLv2 and SSLv3 are
2552disabled by default.
Antoine Pitroub5218772010-05-21 09:56:06 +00002553
Marco Buttu7b2491a2017-04-13 16:17:59 +02002554::
2555
Christian Heimesc4d2e502016-09-12 01:14:35 +02002556 >>> client_context = ssl.SSLContext(ssl.PROTOCOL_TLS_CLIENT)
2557 >>> client_context.options |= ssl.OP_NO_TLSv1
2558 >>> client_context.options |= ssl.OP_NO_TLSv1_1
Christian Heimes5fe668c2016-09-12 00:01:11 +02002559
Antoine Pitroub5218772010-05-21 09:56:06 +00002560
Christian Heimes598894f2016-09-05 23:19:05 +02002561The SSL context created above will only allow TLSv1.2 and later (if
Christian Heimes5fe668c2016-09-12 00:01:11 +02002562supported by your system) connections to a server. :const:`PROTOCOL_TLS_CLIENT`
2563implies certificate validation and hostname checks by default. You have to
2564load certificates into the context.
2565
Antoine Pitroub5218772010-05-21 09:56:06 +00002566
Antoine Pitroub7ffed82012-01-04 02:53:44 +01002567Cipher selection
Antoine Pitrouc5e075f2014-03-22 18:19:11 +01002568''''''''''''''''
Antoine Pitroub7ffed82012-01-04 02:53:44 +01002569
2570If you have advanced security requirements, fine-tuning of the ciphers
2571enabled when negotiating a SSL session is possible through the
2572:meth:`SSLContext.set_ciphers` method. Starting from Python 3.2.3, the
2573ssl module disables certain weak ciphers by default, but you may want
Donald Stufft79ccaa22014-03-21 21:33:34 -04002574to further restrict the cipher choice. Be sure to read OpenSSL's documentation
Sanyam Khurana338cd832018-01-20 05:55:37 +05302575about the `cipher list format <https://www.openssl.org/docs/manmaster/man1/ciphers.html#CIPHER-LIST-FORMAT>`_.
Christian Heimes5fe668c2016-09-12 00:01:11 +02002576If you want to check which ciphers are enabled by a given cipher list, use
2577:meth:`SSLContext.get_ciphers` or the ``openssl ciphers`` command on your
2578system.
Antoine Pitroub7ffed82012-01-04 02:53:44 +01002579
Antoine Pitrou9eefe912013-11-17 15:35:33 +01002580Multi-processing
2581^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2582
2583If using this module as part of a multi-processed application (using,
2584for example the :mod:`multiprocessing` or :mod:`concurrent.futures` modules),
2585be aware that OpenSSL's internal random number generator does not properly
2586handle forked processes. Applications must change the PRNG state of the
2587parent process if they use any SSL feature with :func:`os.fork`. Any
2588successful call of :func:`~ssl.RAND_add`, :func:`~ssl.RAND_bytes` or
2589:func:`~ssl.RAND_pseudo_bytes` is sufficient.
2590
Georg Brandl48310cd2009-01-03 21:18:54 +00002591
Christian Heimes6cdb7952018-02-24 22:12:40 +01002592.. ssl-libressl:
2593
2594LibreSSL support
2595----------------
2596
2597LibreSSL is a fork of OpenSSL 1.0.1. The ssl module has limited support for
2598LibreSSL. Some features are not available when the ssl module is compiled
2599with LibreSSL.
2600
2601* LibreSSL >= 2.6.1 no longer supports NPN. The methods
2602 :meth:`SSLContext.set_npn_protocols` and
2603 :meth:`SSLSocket.selected_npn_protocol` are not available.
2604* :meth:`SSLContext.set_default_verify_paths` ignores the env vars
2605 :envvar:`SSL_CERT_FILE` and :envvar:`SSL_CERT_PATH` although
2606 :func:`get_default_verify_paths` still reports them.
2607
2608
Thomas Wouters1b7f8912007-09-19 03:06:30 +00002609.. seealso::
Thomas Wouters47b49bf2007-08-30 22:15:33 +00002610
Thomas Wouters1b7f8912007-09-19 03:06:30 +00002611 Class :class:`socket.socket`
Georg Brandl4a6cf6c2013-10-06 18:20:31 +02002612 Documentation of underlying :mod:`socket` class
Thomas Wouters47b49bf2007-08-30 22:15:33 +00002613
Georg Brandl5d941342016-02-26 19:37:12 +01002614 `SSL/TLS Strong Encryption: An Introduction <https://httpd.apache.org/docs/trunk/en/ssl/ssl_intro.html>`_
Matt Eaton9cf8c422018-03-10 19:00:04 -06002615 Intro from the Apache HTTP Server documentation
Thomas Wouters47b49bf2007-08-30 22:15:33 +00002616
Georg Brandl5d941342016-02-26 19:37:12 +01002617 `RFC 1422: Privacy Enhancement for Internet Electronic Mail: Part II: Certificate-Based Key Management <https://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc1422>`_
Thomas Wouters1b7f8912007-09-19 03:06:30 +00002618 Steve Kent
Thomas Wouters47b49bf2007-08-30 22:15:33 +00002619
Sanyam Khurana338cd832018-01-20 05:55:37 +05302620 `RFC 4086: Randomness Requirements for Security <https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/rfc4086/>`_
Chandan Kumar63c2c8a2017-06-09 15:13:58 +05302621 Donald E., Jeffrey I. Schiller
Thomas Wouters89d996e2007-09-08 17:39:28 +00002622
Sanyam Khurana338cd832018-01-20 05:55:37 +05302623 `RFC 5280: Internet X.509 Public Key Infrastructure Certificate and Certificate Revocation List (CRL) Profile <https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/rfc5280/>`_
Chandan Kumar63c2c8a2017-06-09 15:13:58 +05302624 D. Cooper
Antoine Pitrou58ddc9d2013-01-05 21:20:29 +01002625
Georg Brandl5d941342016-02-26 19:37:12 +01002626 `RFC 5246: The Transport Layer Security (TLS) Protocol Version 1.2 <https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc5246>`_
Antoine Pitrou58ddc9d2013-01-05 21:20:29 +01002627 T. Dierks et. al.
2628
Georg Brandl5d941342016-02-26 19:37:12 +01002629 `RFC 6066: Transport Layer Security (TLS) Extensions <https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6066>`_
Antoine Pitrou58ddc9d2013-01-05 21:20:29 +01002630 D. Eastlake
2631
Serhiy Storchaka6dff0202016-05-07 10:49:07 +03002632 `IANA TLS: Transport Layer Security (TLS) Parameters <https://www.iana.org/assignments/tls-parameters/tls-parameters.xml>`_
Antoine Pitrou58ddc9d2013-01-05 21:20:29 +01002633 IANA
Christian Heimesad0ffa02017-09-06 16:19:56 -07002634
2635 `RFC 7525: Recommendations for Secure Use of Transport Layer Security (TLS) and Datagram Transport Layer Security (DTLS) <https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc7525>`_
2636 IETF
2637
2638 `Mozilla's Server Side TLS recommendations <https://wiki.mozilla.org/Security/Server_Side_TLS>`_
2639 Mozilla