blob: 3e5c9c208de75d153bcaf0a6b002c65bc79675f6 [file] [log] [blame]
Jean-Paul Calderoneb6f57be2008-03-06 21:22:16 -05001 Python OpenSSL Manual
2 __________________________________________________________________
Jean-Paul Calderone897bc252008-02-18 20:50:23 -05003
Jean-Paul Calderoneb6f57be2008-03-06 21:22:16 -05004 Python OpenSSL Manual
Jean-Paul Calderone897bc252008-02-18 20:50:23 -05005
6 Martin Sjögren
7
Jean-Paul Calderoneb6f57be2008-03-06 21:22:16 -05008 martin@strakt.com
Jean-Paul Calderone897bc252008-02-18 20:50:23 -05009
10 Abstract:
11
12 This module is a rather thin wrapper around (a subset of) the OpenSSL
13 library. With thin wrapper I mean that a lot of the object methods do
14 nothing more than calling a corresponding function in the OpenSSL
15 library.
16
17Contents
18
Jean-Paul Calderoneb6f57be2008-03-06 21:22:16 -050019 * 1 Introduction
20 * 2 Building and Installing
21 + 2.1 Building the Module on a Unix System
22 + 2.2 Building the Module on a Windows System
23 * 3 OpenSSL -- Python interface to OpenSSL
24 + 3.1 crypto -- Generic cryptographic module
Jean-Paul Calderone897bc252008-02-18 20:50:23 -050025 + 3.2 rand -- An interface to the OpenSSL pseudo random number
Jean-Paul Calderoneb6f57be2008-03-06 21:22:16 -050026 generator
27 + 3.3 SSL -- An interface to the SSL-specific parts of OpenSSL
28 * 4 Internals
29 + 4.1 Exceptions
30 + 4.2 Callbacks
31 + 4.3 Acessing Socket Methods
Jean-Paul Calderone897bc252008-02-18 20:50:23 -050032
33
Jean-Paul Calderoneb6f57be2008-03-06 21:22:16 -050034 1 Introduction
Jean-Paul Calderone897bc252008-02-18 20:50:23 -050035
36 The reason this module exists at all is that the SSL support in the
Jean-Paul Calderoneb6f57be2008-03-06 21:22:16 -050037 socket module in the Python 2.1 distribution (which is what we used, of
38 course I cannot speak for later versions) is severely limited.
Jean-Paul Calderone897bc252008-02-18 20:50:23 -050039
40 When asking about SSL on the comp.lang.python newsgroup (or on
41 python-list@python.org) people usually pointed you to the M2Crypto
42 package. The M2Crypto.SSL module does implement a lot of OpenSSL's
Jean-Paul Calderoneb6f57be2008-03-06 21:22:16 -050043 functionality but unfortunately its error handling system does not seem
44 to be finished, especially for non-blocking I/O. I think that much of
45 the reason for this is that M2Crypto^1 is developed using SWIG^2. This
46 makes it awkward to create functions that e.g. can return both an
47 integer and NULL since (as far as I know) you basically write C
48 functions and SWIG makes wrapper functions that parses the Python
Jean-Paul Calderone897bc252008-02-18 20:50:23 -050049 argument list and calls your C function, and finally transforms your
50 return value to a Python object.
51
52
53 2 Building and Installing
54
55 These instructions can also be found in the file INSTALL.
56
Jean-Paul Calderoneb6f57be2008-03-06 21:22:16 -050057 I have tested this on Debian Linux systems (woody and sid), Solaris 2.6
58 and 2.7. Others have successfully compiled it on Windows and NT.
Jean-Paul Calderone897bc252008-02-18 20:50:23 -050059
60
612.1 Building the Module on a Unix System
62
Jean-Paul Calderoneb6f57be2008-03-06 21:22:16 -050063 pyOpenSSL uses distutils, so there really shouldn't be any problems. To
64 build the library:
Jean-Paul Calderone897bc252008-02-18 20:50:23 -050065
66python setup.py build
67
68 If your OpenSSL header files aren't in /usr/include, you may need to
Jean-Paul Calderoneb6f57be2008-03-06 21:22:16 -050069 supply the -I flag to let the setup script know where to look. The same
70 goes for the libraries of course, use the -L flag. Note that build
71 won't accept these flags, so you have to run first build_ext and then
72 build! Example:
Jean-Paul Calderone897bc252008-02-18 20:50:23 -050073
74python setup.py build_ext -I/usr/local/ssl/include -L/usr/local/ssl/lib
75python setup.py build
76
77 Now you should have a directory called OpenSSL that contains e.g.
78 SSL.so and __init__.py somewhere in the build dicrectory, so just:
79
80python setup.py install
81
82 If you, for some arcane reason, don't want the module to appear in the
83 site-packages directory, use the --prefix option.
84
85 You can, of course, do
86
87python setup.py --help
88
89 to find out more about how to use the script.
90
91
922.2 Building the Module on a Windows System
93
Jean-Paul Calderoneb6f57be2008-03-06 21:22:16 -050094 Big thanks to Itamar Shtull-Trauring and Oleg Orlov for their help with
95 Windows build instructions. Same as for Unix systems, we have to
Jean-Paul Calderone897bc252008-02-18 20:50:23 -050096 separate the build_ext and the build.
97
98 Building the library:
99
100setup.py build_ext -I ...\openssl\inc32 -L ...\openssl\out32dll
101setup.py build
102
103 Where ...\openssl is of course the location of your OpenSSL
104 installation.
105
106 Installation is the same as for Unix systems:
107
108setup.py install
109
110 And similarily, you can do
111
112setup.py --help
113
114 to get more information.
115
116
Jean-Paul Calderoneb6f57be2008-03-06 21:22:16 -0500117 3 OpenSSL -- Python interface to OpenSSL
Jean-Paul Calderone897bc252008-02-18 20:50:23 -0500118
119 This package provides a high-level interface to the functions in the
120 OpenSSL library. The following modules are defined:
121
122 crypto
123 Generic cryptographic module. Note that if anything is
124 incomplete, this module is!
125
126 rand
127 An interface to the OpenSSL pseudo random number generator.
128
129 SSL
130 An interface to the SSL-specific parts of OpenSSL.
131
132
1333.1 crypto -- Generic cryptographic module
134
135 X509Type
136 A Python type object representing the X509 object type.
137
138 X509()
139 Factory function that creates an X509 object.
140
141 X509NameType
142 A Python type object representing the X509Name object type.
143
144 X509Name(x509name)
145 Factory function that creates a copy of x509name.
146
147 X509ReqType
148 A Python type object representing the X509Req object type.
149
150 X509Req()
151 Factory function that creates an X509Req object.
152
153 X509StoreType
154 A Python type object representing the X509Store object type.
155
156 PKeyType
157 A Python type object representing the PKey object type.
158
159 PKey()
160 Factory function that creates a PKey object.
161
162 PKCS7Type
163 A Python type object representing the PKCS7 object type.
164
165 PKCS12Type
166 A Python type object representing the PKCS12 object type.
167
168 X509ExtensionType
Jean-Paul Calderoneb6f57be2008-03-06 21:22:16 -0500169 A Python type object representing the X509Extension object type.
Jean-Paul Calderone897bc252008-02-18 20:50:23 -0500170
171 X509Extension(typename, critical, value)
172 Factory function that creates a X509Extension object.
173
174 NetscapeSPKIType
175 A Python type object representing the NetscapeSPKI object type.
176
177 NetscapeSPKI([enc])
178 Factory function that creates a NetscapeSPKI object. If the enc
179 argument is present, it should be a base64-encoded string
180 representing a NetscapeSPKI object, as returned by the
181 b64_encode method.
182
183 FILETYPE_PEM
184
185 FILETYPE_ASN1
186 File type constants.
187
188 TYPE_RSA
189
190 TYPE_DSA
191 Key type constants.
192
193 exception Error
194 Generic exception used in the crypto module.
195
196 dump_certificate(type, cert)
197 Dump the certificate cert into a buffer string encoded with the
198 type type.
199
200 dump_certificate_request(type, req)
201 Dump the certificate request req into a buffer string encoded
202 with the type type.
203
204 dump_privatekey(type, pkey[, cipher, passphrase])
205 Dump the private key pkey into a buffer string encoded with the
206 type type, optionally (if type is FILETYPE_PEM) encrypting it
207 using cipher and passphrase.
208
209 passphrase must be either a string or a callback for providing
210 the pass phrase.
211
212 load_certificate(type, buffer)
213 Load a certificate (X509) from the string buffer encoded with
214 the type type.
215
216 load_certificate_request(type, buffer)
217 Load a certificate request (X509Req) from the string buffer
218 encoded with the type type.
219
220 load_privatekey(type, buffer[, passphrase])
221 Load a private key (PKey) from the string buffer encoded with
222 the type type (must be one of FILETYPE_PEM and FILETYPE_ASN1).
223
224 passphrase must be either a string or a callback for providing
225 the pass phrase.
226
227 load_pkcs7_data(type, buffer)
228 Load pkcs7 data from the string buffer encoded with the type
229 type.
230
231 load_pkcs12(buffer[, passphrase])
Jean-Paul Calderoneb6f57be2008-03-06 21:22:16 -0500232 Load pkcs12 data from the string buffer. If the pkcs12 structure
233 is encrypted, a passphrase must be included.
Jean-Paul Calderone897bc252008-02-18 20:50:23 -0500234
235
236 3.1.1 X509 objects
237
238 X509 objects have the following methods:
239
240 get_issuer()
Jean-Paul Calderone2aa2b332008-03-06 21:43:14 -0500241 Return an X509Name object representing the issuer of the
242 certificate.
Jean-Paul Calderone897bc252008-02-18 20:50:23 -0500243
244 get_pubkey()
245 Return a PKey object representing the public key of the
246 certificate.
247
248 get_serial_number()
249 Return the certificate serial number.
250
251 get_subject()
Jean-Paul Calderone2aa2b332008-03-06 21:43:14 -0500252 Return an X509Name object representing the subject of the
253 certificate.
Jean-Paul Calderone897bc252008-02-18 20:50:23 -0500254
255 get_version()
256 Return the certificate version.
257
Jean-Paul Calderone525ef802008-03-09 20:39:42 -0400258 get_notBefore()
259 Return a string giving the time before which the certificate is
260 not valid. The string is formatted as an ASN1 GENERALIZEDTIME:
261
262 YYYYMMDDhhmmssZ
263 YYYYMMDDhhmmss+hhmm
264 YYYYMMDDhhmmss-hhmm
265
Jean-Paul Calderone24c99262008-03-09 21:48:06 -0400266 If no value exists for this field, None is returned.
267
Jean-Paul Calderone525ef802008-03-09 20:39:42 -0400268 get_notAfter()
269 Return a string giving the time after which the certificate is
270 not valid. The string is formatted as an ASN1 GENERALIZEDTIME:
271
272 YYYYMMDDhhmmssZ
273 YYYYMMDDhhmmss+hhmm
274 YYYYMMDDhhmmss-hhmm
275
Jean-Paul Calderone24c99262008-03-09 21:48:06 -0400276 If no value exists for this field, None is returned.
277
Jean-Paul Calderone525ef802008-03-09 20:39:42 -0400278 set_notBefore(when)
279 Change the time before which the certificate is not valid. when
280 is a string formatted as an ASN1 GENERALIZEDTIME:
281
282 YYYYMMDDhhmmssZ
283 YYYYMMDDhhmmss+hhmm
284 YYYYMMDDhhmmss-hhmm
285
286 set_notAfter(when)
287 Change the time after which the certificate is not valid. when
288 is a string formatted as an ASN1 GENERALIZEDTIME:
289
290 YYYYMMDDhhmmssZ
291 YYYYMMDDhhmmss+hhmm
292 YYYYMMDDhhmmss-hhmm
293
Jean-Paul Calderone897bc252008-02-18 20:50:23 -0500294 gmtime_adj_notBefore(time)
295 Adjust the timestamp (in GMT) when the certificate starts being
296 valid.
297
298 gmtime_adj_notAfter(time)
299 Adjust the timestamp (in GMT) when the certificate stops being
300 valid.
301
302 has_expired()
303 Checks the certificate's time stamp against current time.
Jean-Paul Calderoneb6f57be2008-03-06 21:22:16 -0500304 Returns true if the certificate has expired and false otherwise.
Jean-Paul Calderone897bc252008-02-18 20:50:23 -0500305
306 set_issuer(issuer)
307 Set the issuer of the certificate to issuer.
308
309 set_pubkey(pkey)
310 Set the public key of the certificate to pkey.
311
312 set_serial_number(serialno)
313 Set the serial number of the certificate to serialno.
314
315 set_subject(subject)
316 Set the subject of the certificate to subject.
317
318 set_version(version)
319 Set the certificate version to version.
320
321 sign(pkey, digest)
322 Sign the certificate, using the key pkey and the message digest
323 algorithm identified by the string digest.
324
325 subject_name_hash()
326 Return the hash of the certificate subject.
327
328 digest(digest_name)
329 Return a digest of the certificate, using the digest_name
330 method.
331
332 add_extensions(extensions)
333 Add the extensions in the sequence extensions to the
334 certificate.
335
336
337 3.1.2 X509Name objects
338
Jean-Paul Calderone2dd8ff52008-03-24 17:43:58 -0400339 X509Name objects have the following methods:
340
341 hash()
342 Return an integer giving the first four bytes of the MD5 digest
343 of the DER representation of the name.
344
Jean-Paul Calderoneb6f57be2008-03-06 21:22:16 -0500345 X509Name objects have the following members:
Jean-Paul Calderone897bc252008-02-18 20:50:23 -0500346
347 countryName
348 The country of the entity. C may be used as an alias for
349 countryName.
350
351 stateOrProvinceName
352 The state or province of the entity. ST may be used as an alias
353 for stateOrProvinceName·
354
355 localityName
356 The locality of the entity. L may be used as an alias for
357 localityName.
358
359 organizationName
360 The organization name of the entity. O may be used as an alias
361 for organizationName.
362
363 organizationalUnitName
364 The organizational unit of the entity. OU may be used as an
365 alias for organizationalUnitName.
366
367 commonName
368 The common name of the entity. CN may be used as an alias for
369 commonName.
370
371 emailAddress
372 The e-mail address of the entity.
373
374
375 3.1.3 X509Req objects
376
Jean-Paul Calderoneb6f57be2008-03-06 21:22:16 -0500377 X509Req objects have the following methods:
Jean-Paul Calderone897bc252008-02-18 20:50:23 -0500378
379 get_pubkey()
380 Return a PKey object representing the public key of the
381 certificate request.
382
383 get_subject()
Jean-Paul Calderone2aa2b332008-03-06 21:43:14 -0500384 Return an X509Name object representing the subject of the
385 certificate.
Jean-Paul Calderone897bc252008-02-18 20:50:23 -0500386
387 set_pubkey(pkey)
388 Set the public key of the certificate request to pkey.
389
390 sign(pkey, digest)
Jean-Paul Calderoneb6f57be2008-03-06 21:22:16 -0500391 Sign the certificate request, using the key pkey and the message
392 digest algorithm identified by the string digest.
Jean-Paul Calderone897bc252008-02-18 20:50:23 -0500393
394 verify(pkey)
395 Verify a certificate request using the public key pkey.
396
397
398 3.1.4 X509Store objects
399
Jean-Paul Calderoneb6f57be2008-03-06 21:22:16 -0500400 The X509Store object has currently just one method:
Jean-Paul Calderone897bc252008-02-18 20:50:23 -0500401
402 add_cert(cert)
403 Add the certificate cert to the certificate store.
404
405
406 3.1.5 PKey objects
407
Jean-Paul Calderoneb6f57be2008-03-06 21:22:16 -0500408 The PKey object has the following methods:
Jean-Paul Calderone897bc252008-02-18 20:50:23 -0500409
410 bits()
411 Return the number of bits of the key.
412
413 generate_key(type, bits)
414 Generate a public/private key pair of the type type (one of
415 TYPE_RSA and TYPE_DSA) with the size bits.
416
417 type()
418 Return the type of the key.
419
420
421 3.1.6 PKCS7 objects
422
Jean-Paul Calderoneb6f57be2008-03-06 21:22:16 -0500423 PKCS7 objects have the following methods:
Jean-Paul Calderone897bc252008-02-18 20:50:23 -0500424
425 type_is_signed()
426 FIXME
427
428 type_is_enveloped()
429 FIXME
430
431 type_is_signedAndEnveloped()
432 FIXME
433
434 type_is_data()
435 FIXME
436
437 get_type_name()
438 Get the type name of the PKCS7.
439
440
441 3.1.7 PKCS12 objects
442
Jean-Paul Calderoneb6f57be2008-03-06 21:22:16 -0500443 PKCS12 objects have the following methods:
Jean-Paul Calderone897bc252008-02-18 20:50:23 -0500444
445 get_certificate()
446 Return certificate portion of the PKCS12 structure.
447
448 get_privatekey()
449 Return private key portion of the PKCS12 structure
450
451 get_ca_certificates()
452 Return CA certificates within the PKCS12 object as a tuple.
453 Returns None if no CA certificates are present.
454
455
456 3.1.8 X509Extension objects
457
Jean-Paul Calderoneb6f57be2008-03-06 21:22:16 -0500458 X509Extension objects currently only have one method:
Jean-Paul Calderone897bc252008-02-18 20:50:23 -0500459
460 get_critical()
461 Return the critical field of the extension object.
462
463
464 3.1.9 NetscapeSPKI objects
465
Jean-Paul Calderoneb6f57be2008-03-06 21:22:16 -0500466 NetscapeSPKI objects have the following methods:
Jean-Paul Calderone897bc252008-02-18 20:50:23 -0500467
468 b64_encode()
469 Return a base64-encoded string representation of the object.
470
471 get_pubkey()
472 Return the public key of object.
473
474 set_pubkey(key)
475 Set the public key of the object to key.
476
477 sign(key, digest_name)
478 Sign the NetscapeSPKI object using the given key and
479 digest_name.
480
481 verify(key)
482 Verify the NetscapeSPKI object using the given key.
483
484
4853.2 rand -- An interface to the OpenSSL pseudo random number generator
486
487 This module handles the OpenSSL pseudo random number generator (PRNG)
Jean-Paul Calderoneb6f57be2008-03-06 21:22:16 -0500488 and declares the following:
Jean-Paul Calderone897bc252008-02-18 20:50:23 -0500489
490 add(string, entropy)
491 Mix bytes from string into the PRNG state. The entropy argument
492 is (the lower bound of) an estimate of how much randomness is
493 contained in string, measured in bytes. For more information,
494 see e.g. RFC 1750.
495
496 egd(path[, bytes])
497 Query the Entropy Gathering Daemon^3 on socket path for bytes
498 bytes of random data and and uses add to seed the PRNG. The
499 default value of bytes is 255.
500
501 load_file(path[, bytes])
502 Read bytes bytes (or all of it, if bytes is negative) of data
503 from the file path to seed the PRNG. The default value of bytes
504 is -1.
505
506 screen()
507 Add the current contents of the screen to the PRNG state.
508 Availability: Windows.
509
510 seed(string)
511 This is equivalent to calling add with entropy as the length of
512 the string.
513
514 status()
515 Returns true if the PRNG has been seeded with enough data, and
516 false otherwise.
517
518 write_file(path)
519 Write a number of random bytes (currently 1024) to the file
Jean-Paul Calderoneb6f57be2008-03-06 21:22:16 -0500520 path. This file can then be used with load_file to seed the PRNG
521 again.
Jean-Paul Calderone897bc252008-02-18 20:50:23 -0500522
523
5243.3 SSL -- An interface to the SSL-specific parts of OpenSSL
525
526 This module handles things specific to SSL. There are two objects
Jean-Paul Calderoneb6f57be2008-03-06 21:22:16 -0500527 defined: Context, Connection.
Jean-Paul Calderone897bc252008-02-18 20:50:23 -0500528
529 SSLv2_METHOD
530
531 SSLv3_METHOD
532
533 SSLv23_METHOD
534
535 TLSv1_METHOD
536 These constants represent the different SSL methods to use when
537 creating a context object.
538
539 VERIFY_NONE
540
541 VERIFY_PEER
542
543 VERIFY_FAIL_IF_NO_PEER_CERT
544 These constants represent the verification mode used by the
545 Context object's set_verify method.
546
547 FILETYPE_PEM
548
549 FILETYPE_ASN1
550 File type constants used with the use_certificate_file and
551 use_privatekey_file methods of Context objects.
552
553 OP_SINGLE_DH_USE
554
555 OP_EPHEMERAL_RSA
556
557 OP_NO_SSLv2
558
559 OP_NO_SSLv3
560
561 OP_NO_TLSv1
562 Constants used with set_options of Context objects.
563 OP_SINGLE_DH_USE means to always create a new key when using
564 ephemeral Diffie-Hellman. OP_EPHEMERAL_RSA means to always use
565 ephemeral RSA keys when doing RSA operations. OP_NO_SSLv2,
566 OP_NO_SSLv3 and OP_NO_TLSv1 means to disable those specific
567 protocols. This is interesting if you're using e.g.
568 SSLv23_METHOD to get an SSLv2-compatible handshake, but don't
569 want to use SSLv2.
570
571 ContextType
572 A Python type object representing the Context object type.
573
574 Context(method)
575 Factory function that creates a new Context object given an SSL
576 method. The method should be SSLv2_METHOD, SSLv3_METHOD,
577 SSLv23_METHOD or TLSv1_METHOD.
578
579 ConnectionType
580 A Python type object representing the Connection object type.
581
582 Connection(context, socket)
583 Factory fucnction that creates a new Connection object given an
584 SSL context and a socket ^4 object.
585
586 exception Error
Jean-Paul Calderoneb6f57be2008-03-06 21:22:16 -0500587 This exception is used as a base class for the other SSL-related
588 exceptions, but may also be raised directly.
Jean-Paul Calderone897bc252008-02-18 20:50:23 -0500589
590 Whenever this exception is raised directly, it has a list of
591 error messages from the OpenSSL error queue, where each item is
592 a tuple (lib, function, reason). Here lib, function and reason
593 are all strings, describing where and what the problem is. See
Jean-Paul Calderoneb6f57be2008-03-06 21:22:16 -0500594 err(3) for more information.
Jean-Paul Calderone897bc252008-02-18 20:50:23 -0500595
596 exception ZeroReturnError
597 This exception matches the error return code
Jean-Paul Calderoneb6f57be2008-03-06 21:22:16 -0500598 SSL_ERROR_ZERO_RETURN, and is raised when the SSL Connection has
599 been closed. In SSL 3.0 and TLS 1.0, this only occurs if a
Jean-Paul Calderone897bc252008-02-18 20:50:23 -0500600 closure alert has occurred in the protocol, i.e. the connection
601 has been closed cleanly. Note that this does not necessarily
602 mean that the transport layer (e.g. a socket) has been closed.
603
604 It may seem a little strange that this is an exception, but it
Jean-Paul Calderoneb6f57be2008-03-06 21:22:16 -0500605 does match an SSL_ERROR code, and is very convenient.
Jean-Paul Calderone897bc252008-02-18 20:50:23 -0500606
607 exception WantReadError
608 The operation did not complete; the same I/O method should be
609 called again later, with the same arguments. Any I/O method can
610 lead to this since new handshakes can occur at any time.
611
612 exception WantWriteError
613 See WantReadError.
614
615 exception WantX509LookupError
616 The operation did not complete because an application callback
617 has asked to be called again. The I/O method should be called
618 again later, with the same arguments. Note: This won't occur in
619 this version, as there are no such callbacks in this version.
620
621 exception SysCallError
622 The SysCallError occurs when there's an I/O error and OpenSSL's
623 error queue does not contain any information. This can mean two
624 things: An error in the transport protocol, or an end of file
625 that violates the protocol. The parameter to the exception is
626 always a pair (errnum, errstr).
627
628
629 3.3.1 Context objects
630
Jean-Paul Calderoneb6f57be2008-03-06 21:22:16 -0500631 Context objects have the following methods:
Jean-Paul Calderone897bc252008-02-18 20:50:23 -0500632
633 check_privatekey()
634 Check if the private key (loaded with use_privatekey[_file])
635 matches the certificate (loaded with use_certificate[_file]).
Jean-Paul Calderonef05fbbe2008-03-06 21:52:35 -0500636 Returns None if they match, raises Error otherwise.
Jean-Paul Calderone897bc252008-02-18 20:50:23 -0500637
638 get_app_data()
639 Retrieve application data as set by set_app_data.
640
641 get_cert_store()
642 Retrieve the certificate store (a X509Store object) that the
643 context uses. This can be used to add "trusted" certificates
644 without using the. load_verify_locations() method.
645
646 get_timeout()
647 Retrieve session timeout, as set by set_timeout. The default is
648 300 seconds.
649
650 get_verify_depth()
651 Retrieve the Context object's verify depth, as set by
652 set_verify_depth.
653
654 get_verify_mode()
655 Retrieve the Context object's verify mode, as set by
656 set_verify_mode.
657
658 load_client_ca(pemfile)
Jean-Paul Calderoneb6f57be2008-03-06 21:22:16 -0500659 Read a file with PEM-formatted certificates that will be sent to
660 the client when requesting a client certificate.
Jean-Paul Calderone897bc252008-02-18 20:50:23 -0500661
662 load_verify_locations(pemfile)
663 Specify where CA certificates for verification purposes are
664 located. These are trusted certificates. Note that the
665 certificates have to be in PEM format.
666
667 load_tmp_dh(dhfile)
668 Load parameters for Ephemeral Diffie-Hellman from dhfile.
669
670 set_app_data(data)
671 Associate data with this Context object. data can be retrieved
672 later using the get_app_data method.
673
674 set_cipher_list(ciphers)
675 Set the list of ciphers to be used in this context. See the
676 OpenSSL manual for more information (e.g. ciphers(1))
677
678 set_info_callback(callback)
679 Set the information callback to callback. This function will be
Jean-Paul Calderoneb6f57be2008-03-06 21:22:16 -0500680 called from time to time during SSL handshakes. callback should
681 take three arguments: a Connection object and two integers. The
682 first integer specifies where in the SSL handshake the function
683 was called, and the other the return code from a (possibly
684 failed) internal function call.
Jean-Paul Calderone897bc252008-02-18 20:50:23 -0500685
686 set_options(options)
687 Add SSL options. Options you have set before are not cleared!
Jean-Paul Calderoneb6f57be2008-03-06 21:22:16 -0500688 This method should be used with the OP_* constants.
Jean-Paul Calderone897bc252008-02-18 20:50:23 -0500689
690 set_passwd_cb(callback[, userdata])
691 Set the passphrase callback to callback. This function will be
Jean-Paul Calderoneb6f57be2008-03-06 21:22:16 -0500692 called when a private key with a passphrase is loaded. callback
693 should take a boolean argument repeat and an arbitrary argument
694 data and return the passphrase entered by the user. If repeat is
695 true then callback should ask for the passphrase twice and make
696 sure that the two entries are equal. The data argument is the
697 userdata variable passed to the set_passwd_cb method. If an
698 error occurs, callback should return a false value (e.g. an
699 empty string).
Jean-Paul Calderone897bc252008-02-18 20:50:23 -0500700
701 set_session_id(name)
702 Set the context name within which a session can be reused for
703 this Context object. This is needed when doing session
Jean-Paul Calderoneb6f57be2008-03-06 21:22:16 -0500704 resumption, because there is no way for a stored session to know
705 which Context object it is associated with. name may be any
706 binary data.
Jean-Paul Calderone897bc252008-02-18 20:50:23 -0500707
708 set_timeout(timeout)
709 Set the timeout for newly created sessions for this Context
Jean-Paul Calderoneb6f57be2008-03-06 21:22:16 -0500710 object to timeout. timeout must be given in (whole) seconds. The
711 default value is 300 seconds. See the OpenSSL manual for more
712 information (e.g. SSL_CTX_set_timeout(3)).
Jean-Paul Calderone897bc252008-02-18 20:50:23 -0500713
714 set_verify(mode, callback)
715 Set the verification flags for this Context object to mode and
Jean-Paul Calderoneb6f57be2008-03-06 21:22:16 -0500716 specify that callback should be used for verification callbacks.
717 mode should be one of VERIFY_NONE and VERIFY_PEER. If
718 VERIFY_PEER is used, mode can be OR:ed with
Jean-Paul Calderone897bc252008-02-18 20:50:23 -0500719 VERIFY_FAIL_IF_NO_PEER_CERT and VERIFY_CLIENT_ONCE to further
Jean-Paul Calderoneb6f57be2008-03-06 21:22:16 -0500720 control the behaviour. callback should take five arguments: A
721 Connection object, an X509 object, and three integer variables,
722 which are in turn potential error number, error depth and return
723 code. callback should return true if verification passes and
724 false otherwise.
Jean-Paul Calderone897bc252008-02-18 20:50:23 -0500725
726 set_verify_depth(depth)
727 Set the maximum depth for the certificate chain verification
728 that shall be allowed for this Context object.
729
730 use_certificate(cert)
731 Use the certificate cert which has to be a X509 object.
732
Jean-Paul Calderoneb6f57be2008-03-06 21:22:16 -0500733 add_extra_chain_cert(cert)
734 Adds the certificate cert, which has to be a X509 object, to the
735 certificate chain presented together with the certificate.
736
Jean-Paul Calderone897bc252008-02-18 20:50:23 -0500737 use_certificate_chain_file(file)
738 Load a certificate chain from file which must be PEM encoded.
739
740 use_privatekey(pkey)
741 Use the private key pkey which has to be a PKey object.
742
743 use_certificate_file(file[, format])
744 Load the first certificate found in file. The certificate must
745 be in the format specified by format, which is either
746 FILETYPE_PEM or FILETYPE_ASN1. The default is FILETYPE_PEM.
747
748 use_privatekey_file(file[, format])
749 Load the first private key found in file. The private key must
750 be in the format specified by format, which is either
751 FILETYPE_PEM or FILETYPE_ASN1. The default is FILETYPE_PEM.
752
753
754 3.3.2 Connection objects
755
Jean-Paul Calderoneb6f57be2008-03-06 21:22:16 -0500756 Connection objects have the following methods:
Jean-Paul Calderone897bc252008-02-18 20:50:23 -0500757
758 accept()
759 Call the accept method of the underlying socket and set up SSL
760 on the returned socket, using the Context object supplied to
761 this Connection object at creation. Returns a pair (conn,
762 address). where conn is the new Connection object created, and
763 address is as returned by the socket's accept.
764
765 bind(address)
766 Call the bind method of the underlying socket.
767
768 close()
769 Call the close method of the underlying socket. Note: If you
770 want correct SSL closure, you need to call the shutdown method
771 first.
772
773 connect(address)
774 Call the connect method of the underlying socket and set up SSL
775 on the socket, using the Context object supplied to this
776 Connection object at creation.
777
778 connect_ex(address)
779 Call the connect_ex method of the underlying socket and set up
780 SSL on the socket, using the Context object supplied to this
781 Connection object at creation. Note that if the connect_ex
Jean-Paul Calderoneb6f57be2008-03-06 21:22:16 -0500782 method of the socket doesn't return 0, SSL won't be initialized.
Jean-Paul Calderone897bc252008-02-18 20:50:23 -0500783
784 do_handshake()
785 Perform an SSL handshake (usually called after renegotiate or
Jean-Paul Calderoneb6f57be2008-03-06 21:22:16 -0500786 one of set_accept_state or set_accept_state). This can raise the
787 same exceptions as send and recv.
Jean-Paul Calderone897bc252008-02-18 20:50:23 -0500788
789 fileno()
790 Retrieve the file descriptor number for the underlying socket.
791
792 listen(backlog)
793 Call the listen method of the underlying socket.
794
795 get_app_data()
796 Retrieve application data as set by set_app_data.
797
798 get_cipher_list()
799 Retrieve the list of ciphers used by the Connection object.
800 WARNING: This API has changed. It used to take an optional
801 parameter and just return a string, but not it returns the
802 entire list in one go.
803
804 get_context()
805 Retrieve the Context object associated with this Connection.
806
807 get_peer_certificate()
808 Retrieve the other side's certificate (if any)
809
810 getpeername()
811 Call the getpeername method of the underlying socket.
812
813 getsockname()
814 Call the getsockname method of the underlying socket.
815
816 getsockopt(level, optname[, buflen])
817 Call the getsockopt method of the underlying socket.
818
819 pending()
820 Retrieve the number of bytes that can be safely read from the
Jean-Paul Calderoneb6f57be2008-03-06 21:22:16 -0500821 SSL buffer (not the underlying transport buffer).
Jean-Paul Calderone897bc252008-02-18 20:50:23 -0500822
823 recv(bufsize)
824 Receive data from the Connection. The return value is a string
Jean-Paul Calderoneb6f57be2008-03-06 21:22:16 -0500825 representing the data received. The maximum amount of data to be
826 received at once, is specified by bufsize.
Jean-Paul Calderone897bc252008-02-18 20:50:23 -0500827
828 renegotiate()
829 Renegotiate the SSL session. Call this if you wish to change
830 cipher suites or anything like that.
831
832 send(string)
833 Send the string data to the Connection.
834
835 sendall(string)
836 Send all of the string data to the Connection. This calls send
837 repeatedly until all data is sent. If an error occurs, it's
838 impossible to tell how much data has been sent.
839
840 set_accept_state()
Jean-Paul Calderoneb6f57be2008-03-06 21:22:16 -0500841 Set the connection to work in server mode. The handshake will be
842 handled automatically by read/write.
Jean-Paul Calderone897bc252008-02-18 20:50:23 -0500843
844 set_app_data(data)
845 Associate data with this Connection object. data can be
846 retrieved later using the get_app_data method.
847
848 set_connect_state()
Jean-Paul Calderoneb6f57be2008-03-06 21:22:16 -0500849 Set the connection to work in client mode. The handshake will be
850 handled automatically by read/write.
Jean-Paul Calderone897bc252008-02-18 20:50:23 -0500851
852 setblocking(flag)
853 Call the setblocking method of the underlying socket.
854
855 setsockopt(level, optname, value)
856 Call the setsockopt method of the underlying socket.
857
858 shutdown()
Jean-Paul Calderoneb6f57be2008-03-06 21:22:16 -0500859 Send the shutdown message to the Connection. Returns true if the
860 shutdown message exchange is completed and false otherwise (in
861 which case you call recv() or send() when the connection becomes
862 readable/writeable.
863
864 get_shutdown()
865 Get the shutdown state of the Connection. Returns a bitvector of
866 either or both of SENT_SHUTDOWN and RECEIVED_SHUTDOWN.
867
868 set_shutdown(state)
869 Set the shutdown state of the Connection. state is a bitvector
870 of either or both of SENT_SHUTDOWN and RECEIVED_SHUTDOWN.
Jean-Paul Calderone897bc252008-02-18 20:50:23 -0500871
872 sock_shutdown(how)
873 Call the shutdown method of the underlying socket.
874
875 state_string()
Jean-Paul Calderoneb6f57be2008-03-06 21:22:16 -0500876 Retrieve a verbose string detailing the state of the Connection.
Jean-Paul Calderone897bc252008-02-18 20:50:23 -0500877
878 want_read()
879 Checks if more data has to be read from the transport layer to
880 complete an operation.
881
882 want_write()
883 Checks if there is data to write to the transport layer to
884 complete an operation.
885
886
887 4 Internals
888
889 We ran into three main problems developing this: Exceptions, callbacks
Jean-Paul Calderoneb6f57be2008-03-06 21:22:16 -0500890 and accessing socket methods. This is what this chapter is about.
Jean-Paul Calderone897bc252008-02-18 20:50:23 -0500891
892
8934.1 Exceptions
894
895 We realized early that most of the exceptions would be raised by the
896 I/O functions of OpenSSL, so it felt natural to mimic OpenSSL's error
897 code system, translating them into Python exceptions. This naturally
898 gives us the exceptions SSL.ZeroReturnError, SSL.WantReadError,
Jean-Paul Calderoneb6f57be2008-03-06 21:22:16 -0500899 SSL.WantWriteError, SSL.WantX509LookupError and SSL.SysCallError.
Jean-Paul Calderone897bc252008-02-18 20:50:23 -0500900
Jean-Paul Calderoneb6f57be2008-03-06 21:22:16 -0500901 For more information about this, see section 3.3.
Jean-Paul Calderone897bc252008-02-18 20:50:23 -0500902
903
9044.2 Callbacks
905
Jean-Paul Calderoneb6f57be2008-03-06 21:22:16 -0500906 There are a number of problems with callbacks. First of all, OpenSSL is
907 written as a C library, it's not meant to have Python callbacks, so a
908 way around that is needed. Another problem is thread support. A lot of
909 the OpenSSL I/O functions can block if the socket is in blocking mode,
910 and then you want other Python threads to be able to do other things.
911 The real trouble is if you've released the thread lock to do a
Jean-Paul Calderone897bc252008-02-18 20:50:23 -0500912 potentially blocking operation, and the operation calls a callback.
Jean-Paul Calderoneb6f57be2008-03-06 21:22:16 -0500913 Then we must take the thread lock back^5.
Jean-Paul Calderone897bc252008-02-18 20:50:23 -0500914
915 There are two solutions to the first problem, both of which are
916 necessary. The first solution to use is if the C callback allows
917 ''userdata'' to be passed to it (an arbitrary pointer normally). This
918 is great! We can set our Python function object as the real userdata
919 and emulate userdata for the Python function in another way. The other
Jean-Paul Calderoneb6f57be2008-03-06 21:22:16 -0500920 solution can be used if an object with an ''app_data'' system always is
921 passed to the callback. For example, the SSL object in OpenSSL has
Jean-Paul Calderone897bc252008-02-18 20:50:23 -0500922 app_data functions and in e.g. the verification callbacks, you can
923 retrieve the related SSL object. What we do is to set our wrapper
924 Connection object as app_data for the SSL object, and we can easily
Jean-Paul Calderoneb6f57be2008-03-06 21:22:16 -0500925 find the Python callback.
Jean-Paul Calderone897bc252008-02-18 20:50:23 -0500926
927 The other problem is also partially solved by app_data. Since we're
928 associating our wrapper objects with the ''real'' objects, we can
929 easily access data from the Connection object. The solution then is to
930 simply include a PyThreadState variable in the Connection declaration,
931 and write macros similar to Py_BEGIN_ALLOW_THREADS and
932 Py_END_ALLOW_THREADS that allows specifying of the PyThreadState
933 variable to use. Now we can simply ''begin allow threads'' before a
934 potentially blocking operation, and ''end allow threads'' before
Jean-Paul Calderoneb6f57be2008-03-06 21:22:16 -0500935 calling a callback.
Jean-Paul Calderone897bc252008-02-18 20:50:23 -0500936
937
9384.3 Acessing Socket Methods
939
940 We quickly saw the benefit of wrapping socket methods in the
941 SSL.Connection class, for an easy transition into using SSL. The
942 problem here is that the socket module lacks a C API, and all the
Jean-Paul Calderoneb6f57be2008-03-06 21:22:16 -0500943 methods are declared static. One approach would be to have OpenSSL as a
944 submodule to the socket module, placing all the code in socketmodule.c,
945 but this is obviously not a good solution, since you might not want to
946 import tonnes of extra stuff you're not going to use when importing the
947 socket module. The other approach is to somehow get a pointer to the
948 method to be called, either the C function, or a callable Python
949 object. This is not really a good solution either, since there's a lot
950 of lookups involved.
Jean-Paul Calderone897bc252008-02-18 20:50:23 -0500951
Jean-Paul Calderoneb6f57be2008-03-06 21:22:16 -0500952 The way it works is that you have to supply a ``socket-like'' transport
953 object to the SSL.Connection. The only requirement of this object is
954 that it has a fileno() method that returns a file descriptor that's
955 valid at the C level (i.e. you can use the system calls read and
956 write). If you want to use the connect() or accept() methods of the
957 SSL.Connection object, the transport object has to supply such methods
958 too. Apart from them, any method lookups in the SSL.Connection object
959 that fail are passed on to the underlying transport object.
Jean-Paul Calderone897bc252008-02-18 20:50:23 -0500960
961 Future changes might be to allow Python-level transport objects, that
Jean-Paul Calderoneb6f57be2008-03-06 21:22:16 -0500962 instead of having fileno() methods, have read() and write() methods, so
963 more advanced features of Python can be used. This would probably
Jean-Paul Calderone897bc252008-02-18 20:50:23 -0500964 entail some sort of OpenSSL ``BIOs'', but converting Python strings
965 back and forth is expensive, so this shouldn't be used unless
966 necessary. Other nice things would be to be able to pass in different
Jean-Paul Calderoneb6f57be2008-03-06 21:22:16 -0500967 transport objects for reading and writing, but then the fileno() method
968 of SSL.Connection becomes virtually useless. Also, should the method
969 resolution be used on the read-transport or the write-transport?
Jean-Paul Calderone897bc252008-02-18 20:50:23 -0500970
971 About this document ...
972
973 Python OpenSSL Manual
974
975 This document was generated using the LaTeX2HTML translator.
976
977 LaTeX2HTML is Copyright © 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, Nikos Drakos,
978 Computer Based Learning Unit, University of Leeds, and Copyright ©
979 1997, 1998, Ross Moore, Mathematics Department, Macquarie University,
980 Sydney.
981
982 The application of LaTeX2HTML to the Python documentation has been
983 heavily tailored by Fred L. Drake, Jr. Original navigation icons were
984 contributed by Christopher Petrilli.
Jean-Paul Calderoneb6f57be2008-03-06 21:22:16 -0500985 __________________________________________________________________
Jean-Paul Calderone897bc252008-02-18 20:50:23 -0500986
987 Footnotes
988
989 ... M2Crypto^1
990 See http://www.post1.com/home/ngps/m2/
991
992 ... SWIG^2
993 See http://swig.sourceforge.net/
994
995 ... Daemon^3
996 See http://www.lothar.com/tech/crypto/
997
998 ... socket^4
999 Actually, all that is required is an object that behaves like a
1000 socket, you could even use files, even though it'd be tricky to
1001 get the handshakes right!
1002
1003 ... back^5
1004 I'm not sure why this is necessary, but otherwise I get a
1005 segmentation violation on PyEval_CallObject
Jean-Paul Calderoneb6f57be2008-03-06 21:22:16 -05001006 __________________________________________________________________
Jean-Paul Calderone897bc252008-02-18 20:50:23 -05001007
Jean-Paul Calderoneb6f57be2008-03-06 21:22:16 -05001008 Python OpenSSL Manual
1009 __________________________________________________________________
Jean-Paul Calderone897bc252008-02-18 20:50:23 -05001010
Jean-Paul Calderone14f02a02008-03-22 00:08:01 -04001011 Release 0.7a1.