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Jean-Paul Calderone897bc252008-02-18 20:50:23 -05001\documentclass{howto}
2
3\title{Python OpenSSL Manual}
4
Jean-Paul Calderone14f02a02008-03-22 00:08:01 -04005\release{0.7a1}
Jean-Paul Calderone897bc252008-02-18 20:50:23 -05006
7\author{Martin Sjögren}
8\authoraddress{\email{martin@strakt.com}}
9
10\usepackage[english]{babel}
11\usepackage[T1]{fontenc}
12
13\begin{document}
14
15\maketitle
16
17\begin{abstract}
18\noindent
19This module is a rather thin wrapper around (a subset of) the OpenSSL library.
20With thin wrapper I mean that a lot of the object methods do nothing more than
21calling a corresponding function in the OpenSSL library.
22\end{abstract}
23
24\tableofcontents
25
26
27\section{Introduction \label{intro}}
28
29The reason this module exists at all is that the SSL support in the socket
30module in the Python 2.1 distribution (which is what we used, of course I
31cannot speak for later versions) is severely limited.
32
33When asking about SSL on the comp.lang.python newsgroup (or on
34python-list@python.org) people usually pointed you to the M2Crypto package.
35The M2Crypto.SSL module does implement a lot of OpenSSL's functionality but
36unfortunately its error handling system does not seem to be finished,
37especially for non-blocking I/O. I think that much of the reason for this
38is that M2Crypto\footnote{See \url{http://www.post1.com/home/ngps/m2/}} is
39developed using SWIG\footnote{See \url{http://swig.sourceforge.net/}}. This
40makes it awkward to create functions that e.g. can return both an integer and
41NULL since (as far as I know) you basically write C functions and SWIG makes
42wrapper functions that parses the Python argument list and calls your C
43function, and finally transforms your return value to a Python object.
44
45
46\section{Building and Installing \label{building}}
47
48These instructions can also be found in the file \verb|INSTALL|.
49
50I have tested this on Debian Linux systems (woody and sid), Solaris 2.6 and
512.7. Others have successfully compiled it on Windows and NT.
52
53\subsection{Building the Module on a Unix System \label{building-unix}}
54
55pyOpenSSL uses distutils, so there really shouldn't be any problems. To build
56the library:
57\begin{verbatim}
58python setup.py build
59\end{verbatim}
60
61If your OpenSSL header files aren't in \verb|/usr/include|, you may need to
62supply the \verb|-I| flag to let the setup script know where to look. The same
63goes for the libraries of course, use the \verb|-L| flag. Note that
64\verb|build| won't accept these flags, so you have to run first
65\verb|build_ext| and then \verb|build|! Example:
66\begin{verbatim}
67python setup.py build_ext -I/usr/local/ssl/include -L/usr/local/ssl/lib
68python setup.py build
69\end{verbatim}
70
71Now you should have a directory called \verb|OpenSSL| that contains e.g.
72\verb|SSL.so| and \verb|__init__.py| somewhere in the build dicrectory,
73so just:
74\begin{verbatim}
75python setup.py install
76\end{verbatim}
77
78If you, for some arcane reason, don't want the module to appear in the
79\verb|site-packages| directory, use the \verb|--prefix| option.
80
81You can, of course, do
82\begin{verbatim}
83python setup.py --help
84\end{verbatim}
85
86to find out more about how to use the script.
87
88\subsection{Building the Module on a Windows System \label{building-windows}}
89
90Big thanks to Itamar Shtull-Trauring and Oleg Orlov for their help with
91Windows build instructions. Same as for Unix systems, we have to separate
92the \verb|build_ext| and the \verb|build|.
93
94Building the library:
95
96\begin{verbatim}
97setup.py build_ext -I ...\openssl\inc32 -L ...\openssl\out32dll
98setup.py build
99\end{verbatim}
100
101Where \verb|...\openssl| is of course the location of your OpenSSL installation.
102
103Installation is the same as for Unix systems:
104\begin{verbatim}
105setup.py install
106\end{verbatim}
107
108And similarily, you can do
109\begin{verbatim}
110setup.py --help
111\end{verbatim}
112
113to get more information.
114
115
116\section{\module{OpenSSL} --- Python interface to OpenSSL \label{openssl}}
117
118\declaremodule{extension}{OpenSSL}
119\modulesynopsis{Python interface to OpenSSL}
120
121This package provides a high-level interface to the functions in the
122OpenSSL library. The following modules are defined:
123
124\begin{datadesc}{crypto}
125Generic cryptographic module. Note that if anything is incomplete, this module is!
126\end{datadesc}
127
128\begin{datadesc}{rand}
129An interface to the OpenSSL pseudo random number generator.
130\end{datadesc}
131
132\begin{datadesc}{SSL}
133An interface to the SSL-specific parts of OpenSSL.
134\end{datadesc}
135
136
137% % % crypto moduleOpenSSL
138
139\subsection{\module{crypto} --- Generic cryptographic module \label{openssl-crypto}}
140
141\declaremodule{extension}{crypto}
142\modulesynopsis{Generic cryptographic module}
143
144\begin{datadesc}{X509Type}
145A Python type object representing the X509 object type.
146\end{datadesc}
147
148\begin{funcdesc}{X509}{}
149Factory function that creates an X509 object.
150\end{funcdesc}
151
152\begin{datadesc}{X509NameType}
153A Python type object representing the X509Name object type.
154\end{datadesc}
155
156\begin{funcdesc}{X509Name}{x509name}
157Factory function that creates a copy of \var{x509name}.
158\end{funcdesc}
159
160\begin{datadesc}{X509ReqType}
161A Python type object representing the X509Req object type.
162\end{datadesc}
163
164\begin{funcdesc}{X509Req}{}
165Factory function that creates an X509Req object.
166\end{funcdesc}
167
168\begin{datadesc}{X509StoreType}
169A Python type object representing the X509Store object type.
170\end{datadesc}
171
172\begin{datadesc}{PKeyType}
173A Python type object representing the PKey object type.
174\end{datadesc}
175
176\begin{funcdesc}{PKey}{}
177Factory function that creates a PKey object.
178\end{funcdesc}
179
180\begin{datadesc}{PKCS7Type}
181A Python type object representing the PKCS7 object type.
182\end{datadesc}
183
184\begin{datadesc}{PKCS12Type}
185A Python type object representing the PKCS12 object type.
186\end{datadesc}
187
188\begin{datadesc}{X509ExtensionType}
189A Python type object representing the X509Extension object type.
190\end{datadesc}
191
192\begin{funcdesc}{X509Extension}{typename, critical, value}
193Factory function that creates a X509Extension object.
194\end{funcdesc}
195
196\begin{datadesc}{NetscapeSPKIType}
197A Python type object representing the NetscapeSPKI object type.
198\end{datadesc}
199
200\begin{funcdesc}{NetscapeSPKI}{\optional{enc}}
201Factory function that creates a NetscapeSPKI object. If the \var{enc} argument
202is present, it should be a base64-encoded string representing a NetscapeSPKI
203object, as returned by the \method{b64_encode} method.
204\end{funcdesc}
205
206\begin{datadesc}{FILETYPE_PEM}
207\dataline{FILETYPE_ASN1}
208File type constants.
209\end{datadesc}
210
211\begin{datadesc}{TYPE_RSA}
212\dataline{TYPE_DSA}
213Key type constants.
214\end{datadesc}
215
216\begin{excdesc}{Error}
217Generic exception used in the \module{crypto} module.
218\end{excdesc}
219
220\begin{funcdesc}{dump_certificate}{type, cert}
221Dump the certificate \var{cert} into a buffer string encoded with the type
222\var{type}.
223\end{funcdesc}
224
225\begin{funcdesc}{dump_certificate_request}{type, req}
226Dump the certificate request \var{req} into a buffer string encoded with the
227type \var{type}.
228\end{funcdesc}
229
230\begin{funcdesc}{dump_privatekey}{type, pkey\optional{, cipher, passphrase}}
231Dump the private key \var{pkey} into a buffer string encoded with the type
232\var{type}, optionally (if \var{type} is \constant{FILETYPE_PEM}) encrypting it
233using \var{cipher} and \var{passphrase}.
234
235\var{passphrase} must be either a string or a callback for providing the
236pass phrase.
237\end{funcdesc}
238
239\begin{funcdesc}{load_certificate}{type, buffer}
240Load a certificate (X509) from the string \var{buffer} encoded with the
241type \var{type}.
242\end{funcdesc}
243
244\begin{funcdesc}{load_certificate_request}{type, buffer}
245Load a certificate request (X509Req) from the string \var{buffer} encoded with
246the type \var{type}.
247\end{funcdesc}
248
249\begin{funcdesc}{load_privatekey}{type, buffer\optional{, passphrase}}
250Load a private key (PKey) from the string \var{buffer} encoded with
251the type \var{type} (must be one of \constant{FILETYPE_PEM} and
252\constant{FILETYPE_ASN1}).
253
254\var{passphrase} must be either a string or a callback for providing the
255pass phrase.
256\end{funcdesc}
257
258\begin{funcdesc}{load_pkcs7_data}{type, buffer}
259Load pkcs7 data from the string \var{buffer} encoded with the type \var{type}.
260\end{funcdesc}
261
262\begin{funcdesc}{load_pkcs12}{buffer\optional{, passphrase}}
263Load pkcs12 data from the string \var{buffer}. If the pkcs12 structure is
264encrypted, a \var{passphrase} must be included.
265\end{funcdesc}
266
Jean-Paul Calderone897bc252008-02-18 20:50:23 -0500267\subsubsection{X509 objects \label{openssl-x509}}
268
269X509 objects have the following methods:
270
271\begin{methoddesc}[X509]{get_issuer}{}
Jean-Paul Calderone2aa2b332008-03-06 21:43:14 -0500272Return an X509Name object representing the issuer of the certificate.
Jean-Paul Calderone897bc252008-02-18 20:50:23 -0500273\end{methoddesc}
274
275\begin{methoddesc}[X509]{get_pubkey}{}
276Return a PKey object representing the public key of the certificate.
277\end{methoddesc}
278
279\begin{methoddesc}[X509]{get_serial_number}{}
280Return the certificate serial number.
281\end{methoddesc}
282
283\begin{methoddesc}[X509]{get_subject}{}
Jean-Paul Calderone2aa2b332008-03-06 21:43:14 -0500284Return an X509Name object representing the subject of the certificate.
Jean-Paul Calderone897bc252008-02-18 20:50:23 -0500285\end{methoddesc}
286
287\begin{methoddesc}[X509]{get_version}{}
288Return the certificate version.
289\end{methoddesc}
290
Jean-Paul Calderone525ef802008-03-09 20:39:42 -0400291\begin{methoddesc}[X509]{get_notBefore}{}
292Return a string giving the time before which the certificate is not valid. The
293string is formatted as an ASN1 GENERALIZEDTIME:
294\begin{verbatim}
295 YYYYMMDDhhmmssZ
296 YYYYMMDDhhmmss+hhmm
297 YYYYMMDDhhmmss-hhmm
298\end{verbatim}
Jean-Paul Calderonee0615b52008-03-09 21:44:46 -0400299If no value exists for this field, \code{None} is returned.
Jean-Paul Calderone525ef802008-03-09 20:39:42 -0400300\end{methoddesc}
301
302\begin{methoddesc}[X509]{get_notAfter}{}
303Return a string giving the time after which the certificate is not valid. The
304string is formatted as an ASN1 GENERALIZEDTIME:
305\begin{verbatim}
306 YYYYMMDDhhmmssZ
307 YYYYMMDDhhmmss+hhmm
308 YYYYMMDDhhmmss-hhmm
309\end{verbatim}
Jean-Paul Calderonee0615b52008-03-09 21:44:46 -0400310If no value exists for this field, \code{None} is returned.
Jean-Paul Calderone525ef802008-03-09 20:39:42 -0400311\end{methoddesc}
312
313\begin{methoddesc}[X509]{set_notBefore}{when}
314Change the time before which the certificate is not valid. \var{when} is a
315string formatted as an ASN1 GENERALIZEDTIME:
316\begin{verbatim}
317 YYYYMMDDhhmmssZ
318 YYYYMMDDhhmmss+hhmm
319 YYYYMMDDhhmmss-hhmm
320\end{verbatim}
321\end{methoddesc}
322
323\begin{methoddesc}[X509]{set_notAfter}{when}
324Change the time after which the certificate is not valid. \var{when} is a
325string formatted as an ASN1 GENERALIZEDTIME:
326\begin{verbatim}
327 YYYYMMDDhhmmssZ
328 YYYYMMDDhhmmss+hhmm
329 YYYYMMDDhhmmss-hhmm
330\end{verbatim}
331\end{methoddesc}
332
Jean-Paul Calderone897bc252008-02-18 20:50:23 -0500333\begin{methoddesc}[X509]{gmtime_adj_notBefore}{time}
334Adjust the timestamp (in GMT) when the certificate starts being valid.
335\end{methoddesc}
336
337\begin{methoddesc}[X509]{gmtime_adj_notAfter}{time}
338Adjust the timestamp (in GMT) when the certificate stops being valid.
339\end{methoddesc}
340
341\begin{methoddesc}[X509]{has_expired}{}
342Checks the certificate's time stamp against current time. Returns true if the
343certificate has expired and false otherwise.
344\end{methoddesc}
345
346\begin{methoddesc}[X509]{set_issuer}{issuer}
347Set the issuer of the certificate to \var{issuer}.
348\end{methoddesc}
349
350\begin{methoddesc}[X509]{set_pubkey}{pkey}
351Set the public key of the certificate to \var{pkey}.
352\end{methoddesc}
353
354\begin{methoddesc}[X509]{set_serial_number}{serialno}
355Set the serial number of the certificate to \var{serialno}.
356\end{methoddesc}
357
358\begin{methoddesc}[X509]{set_subject}{subject}
359Set the subject of the certificate to \var{subject}.
360\end{methoddesc}
361
362\begin{methoddesc}[X509]{set_version}{version}
363Set the certificate version to \var{version}.
364\end{methoddesc}
365
366\begin{methoddesc}[X509]{sign}{pkey, digest}
367Sign the certificate, using the key \var{pkey} and the message digest algorithm
368identified by the string \var{digest}.
369\end{methoddesc}
370
371\begin{methoddesc}[X509]{subject_name_hash}{}
372Return the hash of the certificate subject.
373\end{methoddesc}
374
375\begin{methoddesc}[X509]{digest}{digest_name}
376Return a digest of the certificate, using the \var{digest_name} method.
377\end{methoddesc}
378
379\begin{methoddesc}[X509]{add_extensions}{extensions}
380Add the extensions in the sequence \var{extensions} to the certificate.
381\end{methoddesc}
382
383\subsubsection{X509Name objects \label{openssl-x509name}}
384
Jean-Paul Calderone2dd8ff52008-03-24 17:43:58 -0400385X509Name objects have the following methods:
386
387\begin{methoddesc}[X509Name]{hash}{}
388Return an integer giving the first four bytes of the MD5 digest of the DER
389representation of the name.
390\end{methoddesc}
391
Jean-Paul Calderone897bc252008-02-18 20:50:23 -0500392X509Name objects have the following members:
393
394\begin{memberdesc}[X509Name]{countryName}
395The country of the entity. \code{C} may be used as an alias for
396\code{countryName}.
397\end{memberdesc}
398
399\begin{memberdesc}[X509Name]{stateOrProvinceName}
400The state or province of the entity. \code{ST} may be used as an alias for
401\code{stateOrProvinceName}·
402\end{memberdesc}
403
404\begin{memberdesc}[X509Name]{localityName}
405The locality of the entity. \code{L} may be used as an alias for
406\code{localityName}.
407\end{memberdesc}
408
409\begin{memberdesc}[X509Name]{organizationName}
410The organization name of the entity. \code{O} may be used as an alias for
411\code{organizationName}.
412\end{memberdesc}
413
414\begin{memberdesc}[X509Name]{organizationalUnitName}
415The organizational unit of the entity. \code{OU} may be used as an alias for
416\code{organizationalUnitName}.
417\end{memberdesc}
418
419\begin{memberdesc}[X509Name]{commonName}
420The common name of the entity. \code{CN} may be used as an alias for
421\code{commonName}.
422\end{memberdesc}
423
424\begin{memberdesc}[X509Name]{emailAddress}
425The e-mail address of the entity.
426\end{memberdesc}
427
428\subsubsection{X509Req objects \label{openssl-x509req}}
429
430X509Req objects have the following methods:
431
432\begin{methoddesc}[X509Req]{get_pubkey}{}
433Return a PKey object representing the public key of the certificate request.
434\end{methoddesc}
435
436\begin{methoddesc}[X509Req]{get_subject}{}
Jean-Paul Calderone2aa2b332008-03-06 21:43:14 -0500437Return an X509Name object representing the subject of the certificate.
Jean-Paul Calderone897bc252008-02-18 20:50:23 -0500438\end{methoddesc}
439
440\begin{methoddesc}[X509Req]{set_pubkey}{pkey}
441Set the public key of the certificate request to \var{pkey}.
442\end{methoddesc}
443
444\begin{methoddesc}[X509Req]{sign}{pkey, digest}
445Sign the certificate request, using the key \var{pkey} and the message digest
446algorithm identified by the string \var{digest}.
447\end{methoddesc}
448
449\begin{methoddesc}[X509Req]{verify}{pkey}
450Verify a certificate request using the public key \var{pkey}.
451\end{methoddesc}
452
453\subsubsection{X509Store objects \label{openssl-x509store}}
454
455The X509Store object has currently just one method:
456
457\begin{methoddesc}[X509Store]{add_cert}{cert}
458Add the certificate \var{cert} to the certificate store.
459\end{methoddesc}
460
461\subsubsection{PKey objects \label{openssl-pkey}}
462
463The PKey object has the following methods:
464
465\begin{methoddesc}[PKey]{bits}{}
466Return the number of bits of the key.
467\end{methoddesc}
468
469\begin{methoddesc}[PKey]{generate_key}{type, bits}
470Generate a public/private key pair of the type \var{type} (one of
471\constant{TYPE_RSA} and \constant{TYPE_DSA}) with the size \var{bits}.
472\end{methoddesc}
473
474\begin{methoddesc}[PKey]{type}{}
475Return the type of the key.
476\end{methoddesc}
477
478\subsubsection{PKCS7 objects \label{openssl-pkcs7}}
479
480PKCS7 objects have the following methods:
481
482\begin{methoddesc}[PKCS7]{type_is_signed}{}
483FIXME
484\end{methoddesc}
485
486\begin{methoddesc}[PKCS7]{type_is_enveloped}{}
487FIXME
488\end{methoddesc}
489
490\begin{methoddesc}[PKCS7]{type_is_signedAndEnveloped}{}
491FIXME
492\end{methoddesc}
493
494\begin{methoddesc}[PKCS7]{type_is_data}{}
495FIXME
496\end{methoddesc}
497
498\begin{methoddesc}[PKCS7]{get_type_name}{}
499Get the type name of the PKCS7.
500\end{methoddesc}
501
502\subsubsection{PKCS12 objects \label{openssl-pkcs12}}
503
504PKCS12 objects have the following methods:
505
506\begin{methoddesc}[PKCS12]{get_certificate}{}
507Return certificate portion of the PKCS12 structure.
508\end{methoddesc}
509
510\begin{methoddesc}[PKCS12]{get_privatekey}{}
511Return private key portion of the PKCS12 structure
512\end{methoddesc}
513
514\begin{methoddesc}[PKCS12]{get_ca_certificates}{}
515Return CA certificates within the PKCS12 object as a tuple. Returns
516None if no CA certificates are present.
517\end{methoddesc}
518
519\subsubsection{X509Extension objects \label{openssl-509ext}}
520
521X509Extension objects currently only have one method:
522
523\begin{methoddesc}[X509Extension]{get_critical}{}
524Return the critical field of the extension object.
525\end{methoddesc}
526
527\subsubsection{NetscapeSPKI objects \label{openssl-netscape-spki}}
528
529NetscapeSPKI objects have the following methods:
530
531\begin{methoddesc}[NetscapeSPKI]{b64_encode}{}
532Return a base64-encoded string representation of the object.
533\end{methoddesc}
534
535\begin{methoddesc}[NetscapeSPKI]{get_pubkey}{}
536Return the public key of object.
537\end{methoddesc}
538
539\begin{methoddesc}[NetscapeSPKI]{set_pubkey}{key}
540Set the public key of the object to \var{key}.
541\end{methoddesc}
542
543\begin{methoddesc}[NetscapeSPKI]{sign}{key, digest_name}
544Sign the NetscapeSPKI object using the given \var{key} and \var{digest_name}.
545\end{methoddesc}
546
547\begin{methoddesc}[NetscapeSPKI]{verify}{key}
548Verify the NetscapeSPKI object using the given \var{key}.
549\end{methoddesc}
550
551
552% % % rand module
553
554\subsection{\module{rand} --- An interface to the OpenSSL pseudo random number generator \label{openssl-rand}}
555
556\declaremodule{extension}{rand}
557\modulesynopsis{An interface to the OpenSSL pseudo random number generator}
558
559This module handles the OpenSSL pseudo random number generator (PRNG) and
560declares the following:
561
562\begin{funcdesc}{add}{string, entropy}
563Mix bytes from \var{string} into the PRNG state. The \var{entropy} argument is
564(the lower bound of) an estimate of how much randomness is contained in
565\var{string}, measured in bytes. For more information, see e.g. \rfc{1750}.
566\end{funcdesc}
567
568\begin{funcdesc}{egd}{path\optional{, bytes}}
569Query the Entropy Gathering Daemon\footnote{See
570\url{http://www.lothar.com/tech/crypto/}} on socket \var{path} for \var{bytes}
571bytes of random data and and uses \function{add} to seed the PRNG. The default
572value of \var{bytes} is 255.
573\end{funcdesc}
574
575\begin{funcdesc}{load_file}{path\optional{, bytes}}
576Read \var{bytes} bytes (or all of it, if \var{bytes} is negative) of data from
577the file \var{path} to seed the PRNG. The default value of \var{bytes} is -1.
578\end{funcdesc}
579
580\begin{funcdesc}{screen}{}
581Add the current contents of the screen to the PRNG state.
582Availability: Windows.
583\end{funcdesc}
584
585\begin{funcdesc}{seed}{string}
586This is equivalent to calling \function{add} with \var{entropy} as the length
587of the string.
588\end{funcdesc}
589
590\begin{funcdesc}{status}{}
591Returns true if the PRNG has been seeded with enough data, and false otherwise.
592\end{funcdesc}
593
594\begin{funcdesc}{write_file}{path}
595Write a number of random bytes (currently 1024) to the file \var{path}. This
596file can then be used with \function{load_file} to seed the PRNG again.
597\end{funcdesc}
598
599
600
601% % % SSL module
602
603\subsection{\module{SSL} --- An interface to the SSL-specific parts of OpenSSL \label{openssl-ssl}}
604
605\declaremodule{extension}{SSL}
606\modulesynopsis{An interface to the SSL-specific parts of OpenSSL}
607
608This module handles things specific to SSL. There are two objects defined:
609Context, Connection.
610
611\begin{datadesc}{SSLv2_METHOD}
612\dataline{SSLv3_METHOD}
613\dataline{SSLv23_METHOD}
614\dataline{TLSv1_METHOD}
615These constants represent the different SSL methods to use when creating a
616context object.
617\end{datadesc}
618
619\begin{datadesc}{VERIFY_NONE}
620\dataline{VERIFY_PEER}
621\dataline{VERIFY_FAIL_IF_NO_PEER_CERT}
622These constants represent the verification mode used by the Context
623object's \method{set_verify} method.
624\end{datadesc}
625
626\begin{datadesc}{FILETYPE_PEM}
627\dataline{FILETYPE_ASN1}
628File type constants used with the \method{use_certificate_file} and
629\method{use_privatekey_file} methods of Context objects.
630\end{datadesc}
631
632\begin{datadesc}{OP_SINGLE_DH_USE}
633\dataline{OP_EPHEMERAL_RSA}
634\dataline{OP_NO_SSLv2}
635\dataline{OP_NO_SSLv3}
636\dataline{OP_NO_TLSv1}
637Constants used with \method{set_options} of Context objects.
638\constant{OP_SINGLE_DH_USE} means to always create a new key when using ephemeral
639Diffie-Hellman. \constant{OP_EPHEMERAL_RSA} means to always use ephemeral RSA keys
640when doing RSA operations. \constant{OP_NO_SSLv2}, \constant{OP_NO_SSLv3} and
641\constant{OP_NO_TLSv1} means to disable those specific protocols. This is
642interesting if you're using e.g. \constant{SSLv23_METHOD} to get an SSLv2-compatible
643handshake, but don't want to use SSLv2.
644\end{datadesc}
645
646\begin{datadesc}{ContextType}
647A Python type object representing the Context object type.
648\end{datadesc}
649
650\begin{funcdesc}{Context}{method}
651Factory function that creates a new Context object given an SSL method. The
652method should be \constant{SSLv2_METHOD}, \constant{SSLv3_METHOD},
653\constant{SSLv23_METHOD} or \constant{TLSv1_METHOD}.
654\end{funcdesc}
655
656\begin{datadesc}{ConnectionType}
657A Python type object representing the Connection object type.
658\end{datadesc}
659
660\begin{funcdesc}{Connection}{context, socket}
661Factory fucnction that creates a new Connection object given an SSL context and
662a socket \footnote{Actually, all that is required is an object that
663\emph{behaves} like a socket, you could even use files, even though it'd be
664tricky to get the handshakes right!} object.
665\end{funcdesc}
666
667\begin{excdesc}{Error}
668This exception is used as a base class for the other SSL-related
669exceptions, but may also be raised directly.
670
671Whenever this exception is raised directly, it has a list of error messages
672from the OpenSSL error queue, where each item is a tuple \code{(\var{lib},
673\var{function}, \var{reason})}. Here \var{lib}, \var{function} and \var{reason}
674are all strings, describing where and what the problem is. See \manpage{err}{3}
675for more information.
676\end{excdesc}
677
678\begin{excdesc}{ZeroReturnError}
679This exception matches the error return code \code{SSL_ERROR_ZERO_RETURN}, and
680is raised when the SSL Connection has been closed. In SSL 3.0 and TLS 1.0, this
681only occurs if a closure alert has occurred in the protocol, i.e. the
682connection has been closed cleanly. Note that this does not necessarily
683mean that the transport layer (e.g. a socket) has been closed.
684
685It may seem a little strange that this is an exception, but it does match an
686\code{SSL_ERROR} code, and is very convenient.
687\end{excdesc}
688
689\begin{excdesc}{WantReadError}
690The operation did not complete; the same I/O method should be called again
691later, with the same arguments. Any I/O method can lead to this since new
692handshakes can occur at any time.
693\end{excdesc}
694
695\begin{excdesc}{WantWriteError}
696See \exception{WantReadError}.
697\end{excdesc}
698
699\begin{excdesc}{WantX509LookupError}
700The operation did not complete because an application callback has asked to be
701called again. The I/O method should be called again later, with the same
702arguments. Note: This won't occur in this version, as there are no such
703callbacks in this version.
704\end{excdesc}
705
706\begin{excdesc}{SysCallError}
707The \exception{SysCallError} occurs when there's an I/O error and OpenSSL's
708error queue does not contain any information. This can mean two things: An
709error in the transport protocol, or an end of file that violates the protocol.
710The parameter to the exception is always a pair \code{(\var{errnum},
711\var{errstr})}.
712\end{excdesc}
713
714
715\subsubsection{Context objects \label{openssl-context}}
716
717Context objects have the following methods:
718
719\begin{methoddesc}[Context]{check_privatekey}{}
720Check if the private key (loaded with \method{use_privatekey\optional{_file}})
721matches the certificate (loaded with \method{use_certificate\optional{_file}}).
Jean-Paul Calderonef05fbbe2008-03-06 21:52:35 -0500722Returns \code{None} if they match, raises \exception{Error} otherwise.
Jean-Paul Calderone897bc252008-02-18 20:50:23 -0500723\end{methoddesc}
724
725\begin{methoddesc}[Context]{get_app_data}{}
726Retrieve application data as set by \method{set_app_data}.
727\end{methoddesc}
728
729\begin{methoddesc}[Context]{get_cert_store}{}
730Retrieve the certificate store (a X509Store object) that the context uses.
731This can be used to add "trusted" certificates without using the.
732\method{load_verify_locations()} method.
733\end{methoddesc}
734
735\begin{methoddesc}[Context]{get_timeout}{}
736Retrieve session timeout, as set by \method{set_timeout}. The default is 300
737seconds.
738\end{methoddesc}
739
740\begin{methoddesc}[Context]{get_verify_depth}{}
741Retrieve the Context object's verify depth, as set by
742\method{set_verify_depth}.
743\end{methoddesc}
744
745\begin{methoddesc}[Context]{get_verify_mode}{}
746Retrieve the Context object's verify mode, as set by \method{set_verify_mode}.
747\end{methoddesc}
748
749\begin{methoddesc}[Context]{load_client_ca}{pemfile}
750Read a file with PEM-formatted certificates that will be sent to the client
751when requesting a client certificate.
752\end{methoddesc}
753
754\begin{methoddesc}[Context]{load_verify_locations}{pemfile}
755Specify where CA certificates for verification purposes are located. These are
756trusted certificates. Note that the certificates have to be in PEM format.
757\end{methoddesc}
758
759\begin{methoddesc}[Context]{load_tmp_dh}{dhfile}
760Load parameters for Ephemeral Diffie-Hellman from \var{dhfile}.
761\end{methoddesc}
762
763\begin{methoddesc}[Context]{set_app_data}{data}
764Associate \var{data} with this Context object. \var{data} can be retrieved
765later using the \method{get_app_data} method.
766\end{methoddesc}
767
768\begin{methoddesc}[Context]{set_cipher_list}{ciphers}
769Set the list of ciphers to be used in this context. See the OpenSSL manual for
770more information (e.g. ciphers(1))
771\end{methoddesc}
772
773\begin{methoddesc}[Context]{set_info_callback}{callback}
774Set the information callback to \var{callback}. This function will be called
775from time to time during SSL handshakes.
Jean-Paul Calderone897bc252008-02-18 20:50:23 -0500776\var{callback} should take three arguments: a Connection object and two
777integers. The first integer specifies where in the SSL handshake the function
778was called, and the other the return code from a (possibly failed) internal
779function call.
780\end{methoddesc}
781
782\begin{methoddesc}[Context]{set_options}{options}
783Add SSL options. Options you have set before are not cleared!
Jean-Paul Calderone897bc252008-02-18 20:50:23 -0500784This method should be used with the \constant{OP_*} constants.
785\end{methoddesc}
786
787\begin{methoddesc}[Context]{set_passwd_cb}{callback\optional{, userdata}}
788Set the passphrase callback to \var{callback}. This function will be called
789when a private key with a passphrase is loaded.
Jean-Paul Calderone897bc252008-02-18 20:50:23 -0500790\var{callback} should take a boolean argument \var{repeat} and an arbitrary
791argument \var{data} and return the passphrase entered by the user. If
792\var{repeat} is true then \var{callback} should ask for the passphrase twice
793and make sure that the two entries are equal. The \var{data} argument is the
794\var{userdata} variable passed to the \method{set_passwd_cb} method. If an
795error occurs, \var{callback} should return a false value (e.g. an empty
796string).
797\end{methoddesc}
798
799\begin{methoddesc}[Context]{set_session_id}{name}
800Set the context \var{name} within which a session can be reused for this
801Context object. This is needed when doing session resumption, because there is
802no way for a stored session to know which Context object it is associated with.
803\var{name} may be any binary data.
804\end{methoddesc}
805
806\begin{methoddesc}[Context]{set_timeout}{timeout}
807Set the timeout for newly created sessions for this Context object to
808\var{timeout}. \var{timeout} must be given in (whole) seconds. The default
809value is 300 seconds. See the OpenSSL manual for more information (e.g.
810SSL_CTX_set_timeout(3)).
811\end{methoddesc}
812
813\begin{methoddesc}[Context]{set_verify}{mode, callback}
814Set the verification flags for this Context object to \var{mode} and specify
815that \var{callback} should be used for verification callbacks. \var{mode}
816should be one of \constant{VERIFY_NONE} and \constant{VERIFY_PEER}. If
817\constant{VERIFY_PEER} is used, \var{mode} can be OR:ed with
818\constant{VERIFY_FAIL_IF_NO_PEER_CERT} and \constant{VERIFY_CLIENT_ONCE} to
819further control the behaviour.
Jean-Paul Calderone897bc252008-02-18 20:50:23 -0500820\var{callback} should take five arguments: A Connection object, an X509 object,
821and three integer variables, which are in turn potential error number, error
822depth and return code. \var{callback} should return true if verification passes
823and false otherwise.
824\end{methoddesc}
825
826\begin{methoddesc}[Context]{set_verify_depth}{depth}
827Set the maximum depth for the certificate chain verification that shall be
828allowed for this Context object.
829\end{methoddesc}
830
831\begin{methoddesc}[Context]{use_certificate}{cert}
832Use the certificate \var{cert} which has to be a X509 object.
833\end{methoddesc}
834
Jean-Paul Calderone87b40602008-02-19 21:13:25 -0500835\begin{methoddesc}[Context]{add_extra_chain_cert}{cert}
836Adds the certificate \var{cert}, which has to be a X509 object, to the
837certificate chain presented together with the certificate.
838\end{methoddesc}
839
Jean-Paul Calderone897bc252008-02-18 20:50:23 -0500840\begin{methoddesc}[Context]{use_certificate_chain_file}{file}
841Load a certificate chain from \var{file} which must be PEM encoded.
842\end{methoddesc}
843
844\begin{methoddesc}[Context]{use_privatekey}{pkey}
845Use the private key \var{pkey} which has to be a PKey object.
846\end{methoddesc}
847
848\begin{methoddesc}[Context]{use_certificate_file}{file\optional{, format}}
849Load the first certificate found in \var{file}. The certificate must be in the
850format specified by \var{format}, which is either \constant{FILETYPE_PEM} or
851\constant{FILETYPE_ASN1}. The default is \constant{FILETYPE_PEM}.
852\end{methoddesc}
853
854\begin{methoddesc}[Context]{use_privatekey_file}{file\optional{, format}}
855Load the first private key found in \var{file}. The private key must be in the
856format specified by \var{format}, which is either \constant{FILETYPE_PEM} or
857\constant{FILETYPE_ASN1}. The default is \constant{FILETYPE_PEM}.
858\end{methoddesc}
859
860
861\subsubsection{Connection objects \label{openssl-connection}}
862
863Connection objects have the following methods:
864
865\begin{methoddesc}[Connection]{accept}{}
866Call the \method{accept} method of the underlying socket and set up SSL on the
867returned socket, using the Context object supplied to this Connection object at
868creation. Returns a pair \code{(\var{conn}, \var{address})}. where \var{conn}
869is the new Connection object created, and \var{address} is as returned by the
870socket's \method{accept}.
871\end{methoddesc}
872
873\begin{methoddesc}[Connection]{bind}{address}
874Call the \method{bind} method of the underlying socket.
875\end{methoddesc}
876
877\begin{methoddesc}[Connection]{close}{}
878Call the \method{close} method of the underlying socket. Note: If you want
879correct SSL closure, you need to call the \method{shutdown} method first.
880\end{methoddesc}
881
882\begin{methoddesc}[Connection]{connect}{address}
883Call the \method{connect} method of the underlying socket and set up SSL on the
884socket, using the Context object supplied to this Connection object at
885creation.
886\end{methoddesc}
887
888\begin{methoddesc}[Connection]{connect_ex}{address}
889Call the \method{connect_ex} method of the underlying socket and set up SSL on
890the socket, using the Context object supplied to this Connection object at
891creation. Note that if the \method{connect_ex} method of the socket doesn't
892return 0, SSL won't be initialized.
893\end{methoddesc}
894
895\begin{methoddesc}[Connection]{do_handshake}{}
896Perform an SSL handshake (usually called after \method{renegotiate} or one of
897\method{set_accept_state} or \method{set_accept_state}). This can raise the
898same exceptions as \method{send} and \method{recv}.
899\end{methoddesc}
900
901\begin{methoddesc}[Connection]{fileno}{}
902Retrieve the file descriptor number for the underlying socket.
903\end{methoddesc}
904
905\begin{methoddesc}[Connection]{listen}{backlog}
906Call the \method{listen} method of the underlying socket.
907\end{methoddesc}
908
909\begin{methoddesc}[Connection]{get_app_data}{}
910Retrieve application data as set by \method{set_app_data}.
911\end{methoddesc}
912
913\begin{methoddesc}[Connection]{get_cipher_list}{}
914Retrieve the list of ciphers used by the Connection object. WARNING: This API
915has changed. It used to take an optional parameter and just return a string,
916but not it returns the entire list in one go.
917\end{methoddesc}
918
919\begin{methoddesc}[Connection]{get_context}{}
920Retrieve the Context object associated with this Connection.
921\end{methoddesc}
922
923\begin{methoddesc}[Connection]{get_peer_certificate}{}
924Retrieve the other side's certificate (if any)
925\end{methoddesc}
926
927\begin{methoddesc}[Connection]{getpeername}{}
928Call the \method{getpeername} method of the underlying socket.
929\end{methoddesc}
930
931\begin{methoddesc}[Connection]{getsockname}{}
932Call the \method{getsockname} method of the underlying socket.
933\end{methoddesc}
934
935\begin{methoddesc}[Connection]{getsockopt}{level, optname\optional{, buflen}}
936Call the \method{getsockopt} method of the underlying socket.
937\end{methoddesc}
938
939\begin{methoddesc}[Connection]{pending}{}
Jean-Paul Calderoneb6f57be2008-03-06 21:22:16 -0500940Retrieve the number of bytes that can be safely read from the SSL buffer
941(\emph{not} the underlying transport buffer).
Jean-Paul Calderone897bc252008-02-18 20:50:23 -0500942\end{methoddesc}
943
944\begin{methoddesc}[Connection]{recv}{bufsize}
945Receive data from the Connection. The return value is a string representing the
946data received. The maximum amount of data to be received at once, is specified
947by \var{bufsize}.
948\end{methoddesc}
949
950\begin{methoddesc}[Connection]{renegotiate}{}
951Renegotiate the SSL session. Call this if you wish to change cipher suites or
952anything like that.
953\end{methoddesc}
954
955\begin{methoddesc}[Connection]{send}{string}
956Send the \var{string} data to the Connection.
957\end{methoddesc}
958
959\begin{methoddesc}[Connection]{sendall}{string}
960Send all of the \var{string} data to the Connection. This calls \method{send}
961repeatedly until all data is sent. If an error occurs, it's impossible to tell
962how much data has been sent.
963\end{methoddesc}
964
965\begin{methoddesc}[Connection]{set_accept_state}{}
966Set the connection to work in server mode. The handshake will be handled
967automatically by read/write.
968\end{methoddesc}
969
970\begin{methoddesc}[Connection]{set_app_data}{data}
971Associate \var{data} with this Connection object. \var{data} can be retrieved
972later using the \method{get_app_data} method.
973\end{methoddesc}
974
975\begin{methoddesc}[Connection]{set_connect_state}{}
976Set the connection to work in client mode. The handshake will be handled
977automatically by read/write.
978\end{methoddesc}
979
980\begin{methoddesc}[Connection]{setblocking}{flag}
981Call the \method{setblocking} method of the underlying socket.
982\end{methoddesc}
983
984\begin{methoddesc}[Connection]{setsockopt}{level, optname, value}
985Call the \method{setsockopt} method of the underlying socket.
986\end{methoddesc}
987
988\begin{methoddesc}[Connection]{shutdown}{}
989Send the shutdown message to the Connection. Returns true if the shutdown
990message exchange is completed and false otherwise (in which case you call
991\method{recv()} or \method{send()} when the connection becomes
992readable/writeable.
993\end{methoddesc}
994
Jean-Paul Calderone72b8f0f2008-02-21 23:57:40 -0500995\begin{methoddesc}[Connection]{get_shutdown}{}
996Get the shutdown state of the Connection. Returns a bitvector of either or
997both of \var{SENT_SHUTDOWN} and \var{RECEIVED_SHUTDOWN}.
998\end{methoddesc}
999
1000\begin{methoddesc}[Connection]{set_shutdown}{state}
1001Set the shutdown state of the Connection. \var{state} is a bitvector of
1002either or both of \var{SENT_SHUTDOWN} and \var{RECEIVED_SHUTDOWN}.
1003\end{methoddesc}
1004
Jean-Paul Calderone897bc252008-02-18 20:50:23 -05001005\begin{methoddesc}[Connection]{sock_shutdown}{how}
1006Call the \method{shutdown} method of the underlying socket.
1007\end{methoddesc}
1008
1009\begin{methoddesc}[Connection]{state_string}{}
1010Retrieve a verbose string detailing the state of the Connection.
1011\end{methoddesc}
1012
1013\begin{methoddesc}[Connection]{want_read}{}
1014Checks if more data has to be read from the transport layer to complete an
1015operation.
1016\end{methoddesc}
1017
1018\begin{methoddesc}[Connection]{want_write}{}
1019Checks if there is data to write to the transport layer to complete an
1020operation.
1021\end{methoddesc}
1022
1023
1024
1025\section{Internals \label{internals}}
1026
1027We ran into three main problems developing this: Exceptions, callbacks and
1028accessing socket methods. This is what this chapter is about.
1029
1030\subsection{Exceptions \label{exceptions}}
1031
1032We realized early that most of the exceptions would be raised by the I/O
1033functions of OpenSSL, so it felt natural to mimic OpenSSL's error code system,
1034translating them into Python exceptions. This naturally gives us the exceptions
1035\exception{SSL.ZeroReturnError}, \exception{SSL.WantReadError},
1036\exception{SSL.WantWriteError}, \exception{SSL.WantX509LookupError} and
1037\exception{SSL.SysCallError}.
1038
1039For more information about this, see section \ref{openssl-ssl}.
1040
1041
1042\subsection{Callbacks \label{callbacks}}
1043
1044There are a number of problems with callbacks. First of all, OpenSSL is written
1045as a C library, it's not meant to have Python callbacks, so a way around that
1046is needed. Another problem is thread support. A lot of the OpenSSL I/O
1047functions can block if the socket is in blocking mode, and then you want other
1048Python threads to be able to do other things. The real trouble is if you've
1049released the thread lock to do a potentially blocking operation, and the
1050operation calls a callback. Then we must take the thread lock back\footnote{I'm
1051not sure why this is necessary, but otherwise I get a segmentation violation on
1052\cfunction{PyEval_CallObject}}.
1053
1054There are two solutions to the first problem, both of which are necessary. The
1055first solution to use is if the C callback allows ''userdata'' to be passed to
1056it (an arbitrary pointer normally). This is great! We can set our Python
1057function object as the real userdata and emulate userdata for the Python
1058function in another way. The other solution can be used if an object with an
1059''app_data'' system always is passed to the callback. For example, the SSL
1060object in OpenSSL has app_data functions and in e.g. the verification
1061callbacks, you can retrieve the related SSL object. What we do is to set our
1062wrapper \class{Connection} object as app_data for the SSL object, and we can
1063easily find the Python callback.
1064
1065The other problem is also partially solved by app_data. Since we're associating
1066our wrapper objects with the ''real'' objects, we can easily access data from
1067the \class{Connection} object. The solution then is to simply include a
1068\ctype{PyThreadState} variable in the \class{Connection} declaration, and write
1069macros similar to \cfunction{Py_BEGIN_ALLOW_THREADS} and
1070\cfunction{Py_END_ALLOW_THREADS} that allows specifying of the
1071\ctype{PyThreadState} variable to use. Now we can simply ''begin allow
1072threads'' before a potentially blocking operation, and ''end allow threads''
1073before calling a callback.
1074
1075
1076\subsection{Acessing Socket Methods \label{socket-methods}}
1077
1078We quickly saw the benefit of wrapping socket methods in the
1079\class{SSL.Connection} class, for an easy transition into using SSL. The
1080problem here is that the \module{socket} module lacks a C API, and all the
1081methods are declared static. One approach would be to have \module{OpenSSL} as
1082a submodule to the \module{socket} module, placing all the code in
1083\file{socketmodule.c}, but this is obviously not a good solution, since you
1084might not want to import tonnes of extra stuff you're not going to use when
1085importing the \module{socket} module. The other approach is to somehow get a
1086pointer to the method to be called, either the C function, or a callable Python
1087object. This is not really a good solution either, since there's a lot of
1088lookups involved.
1089
1090The way it works is that you have to supply a ``\class{socket}-like'' transport
1091object to the \class{SSL.Connection}. The only requirement of this object is
1092that it has a \method{fileno()} method that returns a file descriptor that's
1093valid at the C level (i.e. you can use the system calls read and write). If you
1094want to use the \method{connect()} or \method{accept()} methods of the
1095\class{SSL.Connection} object, the transport object has to supply such
1096methods too. Apart from them, any method lookups in the \class{SSL.Connection}
1097object that fail are passed on to the underlying transport object.
1098
1099Future changes might be to allow Python-level transport objects, that instead
1100of having \method{fileno()} methods, have \method{read()} and \method{write()}
1101methods, so more advanced features of Python can be used. This would probably
1102entail some sort of OpenSSL ``BIOs'', but converting Python strings back and
1103forth is expensive, so this shouldn't be used unless necessary. Other nice
1104things would be to be able to pass in different transport objects for reading
1105and writing, but then the \method{fileno()} method of \class{SSL.Connection}
1106becomes virtually useless. Also, should the method resolution be used on the
1107read-transport or the write-transport?
1108
1109
1110\end{document}