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Jonathan Ballet6381da32011-07-20 16:43:38 +09001.. _openssl-ssl:
2
3:py:mod:`SSL` --- An interface to the SSL-specific parts of OpenSSL
4===================================================================
5
Jonathan Balletc9e066c2011-07-17 22:56:05 +09006.. py:module:: OpenSSL.SSL
Jonathan Ballet6381da32011-07-20 16:43:38 +09007 :synopsis: An interface to the SSL-specific parts of OpenSSL
Jonathan Balletc9e066c2011-07-17 22:56:05 +09008
Jonathan Balletc9e066c2011-07-17 22:56:05 +09009
10This module handles things specific to SSL. There are two objects defined:
11Context, Connection.
12
13.. py:data:: SSLv2_METHOD
Jonathan Ballet6381da32011-07-20 16:43:38 +090014 SSLv3_METHOD
15 SSLv23_METHOD
16 TLSv1_METHOD
Jean-Paul Calderone1461c492013-10-03 16:05:00 -040017 TLSv1_1_METHOD
18 TLSv1_2_METHOD
Jonathan Balletc9e066c2011-07-17 22:56:05 +090019
20 These constants represent the different SSL methods to use when creating a
Jean-Paul Calderone1461c492013-10-03 16:05:00 -040021 context object. If the underlying OpenSSL build is missing support for any
22 of these protocols, constructing a :py:class:`Context` using the
23 corresponding :py:const:`*_METHOD` will raise an exception.
Jonathan Balletc9e066c2011-07-17 22:56:05 +090024
25
26.. py:data:: VERIFY_NONE
Jonathan Ballet6381da32011-07-20 16:43:38 +090027 VERIFY_PEER
28 VERIFY_FAIL_IF_NO_PEER_CERT
Jonathan Balletc9e066c2011-07-17 22:56:05 +090029
30 These constants represent the verification mode used by the Context
31 object's :py:meth:`set_verify` method.
32
33
34.. py:data:: FILETYPE_PEM
Jonathan Ballet6381da32011-07-20 16:43:38 +090035 FILETYPE_ASN1
Jonathan Balletc9e066c2011-07-17 22:56:05 +090036
37 File type constants used with the :py:meth:`use_certificate_file` and
38 :py:meth:`use_privatekey_file` methods of Context objects.
39
40
41.. py:data:: OP_SINGLE_DH_USE
Jean-Paul Calderone1461c492013-10-03 16:05:00 -040042
43 Constant used with :py:meth:`set_options` of Context objects.
44
45 When this option is used, a new key will always be created when using
46 ephemeral Diffie-Hellman.
47
48
49.. py:data:: OP_EPHEMERAL_RSA
50
51 Constant used with :py:meth:`set_options` of Context objects.
52
53 When this option is used, ephemeral RSA keys will always be used when doing
54 RSA operations.
55
56
57.. py:data:: OP_NO_TICKET
58
59 Constant used with :py:meth:`set_options` of Context objects.
60
61 When this option is used, the session ticket extension will not be used.
62
63
64.. py:data:: OP_NO_COMPRESSION
65
66 Constant used with :py:meth:`set_options` of Context objects.
67
68 When this option is used, compression will not be used.
69
70
71.. py:data:: OP_NO_SSLv2
Jonathan Ballet6381da32011-07-20 16:43:38 +090072 OP_NO_SSLv3
73 OP_NO_TLSv1
Jean-Paul Calderone1461c492013-10-03 16:05:00 -040074 OP_NO_TLSv1_1
75 OP_NO_TLSv1_2
Jonathan Balletc9e066c2011-07-17 22:56:05 +090076
77 Constants used with :py:meth:`set_options` of Context objects.
78
Jean-Paul Calderone1461c492013-10-03 16:05:00 -040079 Each of these options disables one version of the SSL/TLS protocol. This
80 is interesting if you're using e.g. :py:const:`SSLv23_METHOD` to get an
81 SSLv2-compatible handshake, but don't want to use SSLv2. If the underlying
82 OpenSSL build is missing support for any of these protocols, the
83 :py:const:`OP_NO_*` constant may be undefined.
Jonathan Balletc9e066c2011-07-17 22:56:05 +090084
85
86.. py:data:: SSLEAY_VERSION
Jonathan Ballet6381da32011-07-20 16:43:38 +090087 SSLEAY_CFLAGS
88 SSLEAY_BUILT_ON
89 SSLEAY_PLATFORM
90 SSLEAY_DIR
Jonathan Balletc9e066c2011-07-17 22:56:05 +090091
92 Constants used with :py:meth:`SSLeay_version` to specify what OpenSSL version
93 information to retrieve. See the man page for the :py:func:`SSLeay_version` C
94 API for details.
95
Jean-Paul Calderone1461c492013-10-03 16:05:00 -040096
Jean-Paul Calderone8e8f90c2012-02-08 13:16:26 -050097.. py:data:: SESS_CACHE_OFF
98 SESS_CACHE_CLIENT
99 SESS_CACHE_SERVER
100 SESS_CACHE_BOTH
101 SESS_CACHE_NO_AUTO_CLEAR
102 SESS_CACHE_NO_INTERNAL_LOOKUP
103 SESS_CACHE_NO_INTERNAL_STORE
104 SESS_CACHE_NO_INTERNAL
105
106 Constants used with :py:meth:`Context.set_session_cache_mode` to specify
107 the behavior of the session cache and potential session reuse. See the man
108 page for the :py:func:`SSL_CTX_set_session_cache_mode` C API for details.
109
110 .. versionadded:: 0.14
Jonathan Balletc9e066c2011-07-17 22:56:05 +0900111
Jean-Paul Calderone1461c492013-10-03 16:05:00 -0400112
Jonathan Balletc9e066c2011-07-17 22:56:05 +0900113.. py:data:: OPENSSL_VERSION_NUMBER
114
115 An integer giving the version number of the OpenSSL library used to build this
116 version of pyOpenSSL. See the man page for the :py:func:`SSLeay_version` C API
117 for details.
118
119
120.. py:function:: SSLeay_version(type)
121
122 Retrieve a string describing some aspect of the underlying OpenSSL version. The
123 type passed in should be one of the :py:const:`SSLEAY_*` constants defined in
124 this module.
125
126
127.. py:data:: ContextType
128
129 See :py:class:`Context`.
130
131
132.. py:class:: Context(method)
133
134 A class representing SSL contexts. Contexts define the parameters of one or
135 more SSL connections.
136
137 *method* should be :py:const:`SSLv2_METHOD`, :py:const:`SSLv3_METHOD`,
Jean-Paul Calderone1461c492013-10-03 16:05:00 -0400138 :py:const:`SSLv23_METHOD`, :py:const:`TLSv1_METHOD`, :py:const:`TLSv1_1_METHOD`,
139 or :py:const:`TLSv1_2_METHOD`.
Jonathan Balletc9e066c2011-07-17 22:56:05 +0900140
141
Jean-Paul Calderone6c896fe2012-02-16 08:10:04 -0500142.. py:class:: Session()
143
144 A class representing an SSL session. A session defines certain connection
145 parameters which may be re-used to speed up the setup of subsequent
146 connections.
147
148 .. versionadded:: 0.14
149
150
Jonathan Balletc9e066c2011-07-17 22:56:05 +0900151.. py:data:: ConnectionType
152
153 See :py:class:`Connection`.
154
155
156.. py:class:: Connection(context, socket)
157
158 A class representing SSL connections.
159
160 *context* should be an instance of :py:class:`Context` and *socket*
161 should be a socket [#connection-context-socket]_ object. *socket* may be
162 *None*; in this case, the Connection is created with a memory BIO: see
163 the :py:meth:`bio_read`, :py:meth:`bio_write`, and :py:meth:`bio_shutdown`
164 methods.
165
166.. py:exception:: Error
167
168 This exception is used as a base class for the other SSL-related
169 exceptions, but may also be raised directly.
170
171 Whenever this exception is raised directly, it has a list of error messages
172 from the OpenSSL error queue, where each item is a tuple *(lib, function,
173 reason)*. Here *lib*, *function* and *reason* are all strings, describing
174 where and what the problem is. See :manpage:`err(3)` for more information.
175
176
177.. py:exception:: ZeroReturnError
178
179 This exception matches the error return code
180 :py:data:`SSL_ERROR_ZERO_RETURN`, and is raised when the SSL Connection has
181 been closed. In SSL 3.0 and TLS 1.0, this only occurs if a closure alert has
182 occurred in the protocol, i.e. the connection has been closed cleanly. Note
183 that this does not necessarily mean that the transport layer (e.g. a socket)
184 has been closed.
185
186 It may seem a little strange that this is an exception, but it does match an
187 :py:data:`SSL_ERROR` code, and is very convenient.
188
189
190.. py:exception:: WantReadError
191
192 The operation did not complete; the same I/O method should be called again
193 later, with the same arguments. Any I/O method can lead to this since new
194 handshakes can occur at any time.
195
196 The wanted read is for **dirty** data sent over the network, not the
197 **clean** data inside the tunnel. For a socket based SSL connection,
198 **read** means data coming at us over the network. Until that read
199 succeeds, the attempted :py:meth:`OpenSSL.SSL.Connection.recv`,
200 :py:meth:`OpenSSL.SSL.Connection.send`, or
201 :py:meth:`OpenSSL.SSL.Connection.do_handshake` is prevented or incomplete. You
202 probably want to :py:meth:`select()` on the socket before trying again.
203
204
205.. py:exception:: WantWriteError
206
207 See :py:exc:`WantReadError`. The socket send buffer may be too full to
208 write more data.
209
210
211.. py:exception:: WantX509LookupError
212
213 The operation did not complete because an application callback has asked to be
214 called again. The I/O method should be called again later, with the same
215 arguments.
216
217 .. note:: This won't occur in this version, as there are no such
218 callbacks in this version.
219
220
221.. py:exception:: SysCallError
222
223 The :py:exc:`SysCallError` occurs when there's an I/O error and OpenSSL's
224 error queue does not contain any information. This can mean two things: An
225 error in the transport protocol, or an end of file that violates the protocol.
226 The parameter to the exception is always a pair *(errnum,
227 errstr)*.
228
229
230
231.. _openssl-context:
232
233Context objects
234---------------
235
236Context objects have the following methods:
237
238.. :py:class:: OpenSSL.SSL.Context
239
240.. py:method:: Context.check_privatekey()
241
242 Check if the private key (loaded with :py:meth:`use_privatekey`) matches the
243 certificate (loaded with :py:meth:`use_certificate`). Returns
244 :py:data:`None` if they match, raises :py:exc:`Error` otherwise.
245
246
247.. py:method:: Context.get_app_data()
248
249 Retrieve application data as set by :py:meth:`set_app_data`.
250
251
252.. py:method:: Context.get_cert_store()
253
254 Retrieve the certificate store (a X509Store object) that the context uses.
255 This can be used to add "trusted" certificates without using the.
256 :py:meth:`load_verify_locations` method.
257
258
259.. py:method:: Context.get_timeout()
260
261 Retrieve session timeout, as set by :py:meth:`set_timeout`. The default is 300
262 seconds.
263
264
265.. py:method:: Context.get_verify_depth()
266
267 Retrieve the Context object's verify depth, as set by
268 :py:meth:`set_verify_depth`.
269
270
271.. py:method:: Context.get_verify_mode()
272
273 Retrieve the Context object's verify mode, as set by :py:meth:`set_verify`.
274
275
276.. py:method:: Context.load_client_ca(pemfile)
277
278 Read a file with PEM-formatted certificates that will be sent to the client
279 when requesting a client certificate.
280
281
282.. py:method:: Context.set_client_ca_list(certificate_authorities)
283
284 Replace the current list of preferred certificate signers that would be
285 sent to the client when requesting a client certificate with the
286 *certificate_authorities* sequence of :py:class:`OpenSSL.crypto.X509Name`'s.
287
288 .. versionadded:: 0.10
289
290
291.. py:method:: Context.add_client_ca(certificate_authority)
292
293 Extract a :py:class:`OpenSSL.crypto.X509Name` from the *certificate_authority*
294 :py:class:`OpenSSL.crypto.X509` certificate and add it to the list of preferred
295 certificate signers sent to the client when requesting a client certificate.
296
297 .. versionadded:: 0.10
298
299
300.. py:method:: Context.load_verify_locations(pemfile, capath)
301
302 Specify where CA certificates for verification purposes are located. These
303 are trusted certificates. Note that the certificates have to be in PEM
304 format. If capath is passed, it must be a directory prepared using the
Jonathan Ballet6381da32011-07-20 16:43:38 +0900305 ``c_rehash`` tool included with OpenSSL. Either, but not both, of
Jonathan Balletc9e066c2011-07-17 22:56:05 +0900306 *pemfile* or *capath* may be :py:data:`None`.
307
308
309.. py:method:: Context.set_default_verify_paths()
310
311 Specify that the platform provided CA certificates are to be used for
312 verification purposes. This method may not work properly on OS X.
313
314
315.. py:method:: Context.load_tmp_dh(dhfile)
316
317 Load parameters for Ephemeral Diffie-Hellman from *dhfile*.
318
319
320.. py:method:: Context.set_app_data(data)
321
322 Associate *data* with this Context object. *data* can be retrieved
323 later using the :py:meth:`get_app_data` method.
324
325
326.. py:method:: Context.set_cipher_list(ciphers)
327
328 Set the list of ciphers to be used in this context. See the OpenSSL manual for
329 more information (e.g. :manpage:`ciphers(1)`)
330
331
332.. py:method:: Context.set_info_callback(callback)
333
334 Set the information callback to *callback*. This function will be called
335 from time to time during SSL handshakes.
336
Jonathan Ballet6381da32011-07-20 16:43:38 +0900337 *callback* should take three arguments: a Connection object and two integers.
338 The first integer specifies where in the SSL handshake the function was
339 called, and the other the return code from a (possibly failed) internal
Jonathan Balletc9e066c2011-07-17 22:56:05 +0900340 function call.
341
342
343.. py:method:: Context.set_options(options)
344
345 Add SSL options. Options you have set before are not cleared!
346 This method should be used with the :py:const:`OP_*` constants.
347
348
Jean-Paul Calderone21641542011-09-11 09:18:14 -0400349.. py:method:: Context.set_mode(mode)
350
351 Add SSL mode. Modes you have set before are not cleared! This method should
352 be used with the :py:const:`MODE_*` constants.
353
354
Jonathan Balletc9e066c2011-07-17 22:56:05 +0900355.. py:method:: Context.set_passwd_cb(callback[, userdata])
356
357 Set the passphrase callback to *callback*. This function will be called
358 when a private key with a passphrase is loaded. *callback* must accept
359 three positional arguments. First, an integer giving the maximum length of
360 the passphrase it may return. If the returned passphrase is longer than
361 this, it will be truncated. Second, a boolean value which will be true if
362 the user should be prompted for the passphrase twice and the callback should
363 verify that the two values supplied are equal. Third, the value given as the
364 *userdata* parameter to :py:meth:`set_passwd_cb`. If an error occurs,
365 *callback* should return a false value (e.g. an empty string).
366
367
Jean-Paul Calderone8e8f90c2012-02-08 13:16:26 -0500368.. py:method:: Context.set_session_cache_mode(mode)
369
370 Set the behavior of the session cache used by all connections using this
371 Context. The previously set mode is returned. See :py:const:`SESS_CACHE_*`
372 for details about particular modes.
373
374 .. versionadded:: 0.14
375
376
377.. py:method:: Context.get_session_cache_mode()
378
379 Get the current session cache mode.
380
381 .. versionadded:: 0.14
382
383
Jonathan Balletc9e066c2011-07-17 22:56:05 +0900384.. py:method:: Context.set_session_id(name)
385
386 Set the context *name* within which a session can be reused for this
387 Context object. This is needed when doing session resumption, because there is
388 no way for a stored session to know which Context object it is associated with.
389 *name* may be any binary data.
390
391
392.. py:method:: Context.set_timeout(timeout)
393
394 Set the timeout for newly created sessions for this Context object to
395 *timeout*. *timeout* must be given in (whole) seconds. The default
396 value is 300 seconds. See the OpenSSL manual for more information (e.g.
397 :manpage:`SSL_CTX_set_timeout(3)`).
398
399
400.. py:method:: Context.set_verify(mode, callback)
401
402 Set the verification flags for this Context object to *mode* and specify
403 that *callback* should be used for verification callbacks. *mode* should be
404 one of :py:const:`VERIFY_NONE` and :py:const:`VERIFY_PEER`. If
405 :py:const:`VERIFY_PEER` is used, *mode* can be OR:ed with
406 :py:const:`VERIFY_FAIL_IF_NO_PEER_CERT` and :py:const:`VERIFY_CLIENT_ONCE`
407 to further control the behaviour.
408
409 *callback* should take five arguments: A Connection object, an X509 object,
410 and three integer variables, which are in turn potential error number, error
411 depth and return code. *callback* should return true if verification passes
412 and false otherwise.
413
414
415.. py:method:: Context.set_verify_depth(depth)
416
417 Set the maximum depth for the certificate chain verification that shall be
418 allowed for this Context object.
419
420
421.. py:method:: Context.use_certificate(cert)
422
423 Use the certificate *cert* which has to be a X509 object.
424
425
426.. py:method:: Context.add_extra_chain_cert(cert)
427
428 Adds the certificate *cert*, which has to be a X509 object, to the
429 certificate chain presented together with the certificate.
430
431
432.. py:method:: Context.use_certificate_chain_file(file)
433
434 Load a certificate chain from *file* which must be PEM encoded.
435
436
437.. py:method:: Context.use_privatekey(pkey)
438
439 Use the private key *pkey* which has to be a PKey object.
440
441
442.. py:method:: Context.use_certificate_file(file[, format])
443
444 Load the first certificate found in *file*. The certificate must be in the
445 format specified by *format*, which is either :py:const:`FILETYPE_PEM` or
446 :py:const:`FILETYPE_ASN1`. The default is :py:const:`FILETYPE_PEM`.
447
448
449.. py:method:: Context.use_privatekey_file(file[, format])
450
451 Load the first private key found in *file*. The private key must be in the
452 format specified by *format*, which is either :py:const:`FILETYPE_PEM` or
453 :py:const:`FILETYPE_ASN1`. The default is :py:const:`FILETYPE_PEM`.
454
455
456.. py:method:: Context.set_tlsext_servername_callback(callback)
457
458 Specify a one-argument callable to use as the TLS extension server name
Jonathan Ballet6381da32011-07-20 16:43:38 +0900459 callback. When a connection using the server name extension is made using
460 this context, the callback will be invoked with the :py:class:`Connection`
461 instance.
Jonathan Balletc9e066c2011-07-17 22:56:05 +0900462
463 .. versionadded:: 0.13
464
465
Jean-Paul Calderone6c896fe2012-02-16 08:10:04 -0500466.. _openssl-session:
467
468Session objects
469---------------
470
471Session objects have no methods.
472
473
Jonathan Balletc9e066c2011-07-17 22:56:05 +0900474.. _openssl-connection:
475
476Connection objects
477------------------
478
479Connection objects have the following methods:
480
481.. py:method:: Connection.accept()
482
483 Call the :py:meth:`accept` method of the underlying socket and set up SSL on the
484 returned socket, using the Context object supplied to this Connection object at
485 creation. Returns a pair *(conn, address)*. where *conn* is the new
486 Connection object created, and *address* is as returned by the socket's
487 :py:meth:`accept`.
488
489
490.. py:method:: Connection.bind(address)
491
492 Call the :py:meth:`bind` method of the underlying socket.
493
494
495.. py:method:: Connection.close()
496
497 Call the :py:meth:`close` method of the underlying socket. Note: If you want
498 correct SSL closure, you need to call the :py:meth:`shutdown` method first.
499
500
501.. py:method:: Connection.connect(address)
502
503 Call the :py:meth:`connect` method of the underlying socket and set up SSL on the
504 socket, using the Context object supplied to this Connection object at
505 creation.
506
507
508.. py:method:: Connection.connect_ex(address)
509
510 Call the :py:meth:`connect_ex` method of the underlying socket and set up SSL on
511 the socket, using the Context object supplied to this Connection object at
512 creation. Note that if the :py:meth:`connect_ex` method of the socket doesn't
513 return 0, SSL won't be initialized.
514
515
516.. py:method:: Connection.do_handshake()
517
518 Perform an SSL handshake (usually called after :py:meth:`renegotiate` or one of
519 :py:meth:`set_accept_state` or :py:meth:`set_accept_state`). This can raise the
520 same exceptions as :py:meth:`send` and :py:meth:`recv`.
521
522
523.. py:method:: Connection.fileno()
524
525 Retrieve the file descriptor number for the underlying socket.
526
527
528.. py:method:: Connection.listen(backlog)
529
530 Call the :py:meth:`listen` method of the underlying socket.
531
532
533.. py:method:: Connection.get_app_data()
534
535 Retrieve application data as set by :py:meth:`set_app_data`.
536
537
538.. py:method:: Connection.get_cipher_list()
539
540 Retrieve the list of ciphers used by the Connection object. WARNING: This API
541 has changed. It used to take an optional parameter and just return a string,
542 but not it returns the entire list in one go.
543
544
545.. py:method:: Connection.get_client_ca_list()
546
547 Retrieve the list of preferred client certificate issuers sent by the server
548 as :py:class:`OpenSSL.crypto.X509Name` objects.
549
550 If this is a client :py:class:`Connection`, the list will be empty until the
551 connection with the server is established.
552
553 If this is a server :py:class:`Connection`, return the list of certificate
554 authorities that will be sent or has been sent to the client, as controlled
555 by this :py:class:`Connection`'s :py:class:`Context`.
556
557 .. versionadded:: 0.10
558
559
560.. py:method:: Connection.get_context()
561
562 Retrieve the Context object associated with this Connection.
563
564
565.. py:method:: Connection.set_context(context)
566
567 Specify a replacement Context object for this Connection.
568
569
570.. py:method:: Connection.get_peer_certificate()
571
572 Retrieve the other side's certificate (if any)
573
574
575.. py:method:: Connection.get_peer_cert_chain()
576
577 Retrieve the tuple of the other side's certificate chain (if any)
578
579
580.. py:method:: Connection.getpeername()
581
582 Call the :py:meth:`getpeername` method of the underlying socket.
583
584
585.. py:method:: Connection.getsockname()
586
587 Call the :py:meth:`getsockname` method of the underlying socket.
588
589
590.. py:method:: Connection.getsockopt(level, optname[, buflen])
591
592 Call the :py:meth:`getsockopt` method of the underlying socket.
593
594
595.. py:method:: Connection.pending()
596
597 Retrieve the number of bytes that can be safely read from the SSL buffer
598 (**not** the underlying transport buffer).
599
600
601.. py:method:: Connection.recv(bufsize)
602
603 Receive data from the Connection. The return value is a string representing the
604 data received. The maximum amount of data to be received at once, is specified
605 by *bufsize*.
606
607
608.. py:method:: Connection.bio_write(bytes)
609
610 If the Connection was created with a memory BIO, this method can be used to add
611 bytes to the read end of that memory BIO. The Connection can then read the
612 bytes (for example, in response to a call to :py:meth:`recv`).
613
614
615.. py:method:: Connection.renegotiate()
616
617 Renegotiate the SSL session. Call this if you wish to change cipher suites or
618 anything like that.
619
620
621.. py:method:: Connection.send(string)
622
623 Send the *string* data to the Connection.
624
625
626.. py:method:: Connection.bio_read(bufsize)
627
628 If the Connection was created with a memory BIO, this method can be used to
629 read bytes from the write end of that memory BIO. Many Connection methods will
630 add bytes which must be read in this manner or the buffer will eventually fill
631 up and the Connection will be able to take no further actions.
632
633
634.. py:method:: Connection.sendall(string)
635
636 Send all of the *string* data to the Connection. This calls :py:meth:`send`
637 repeatedly until all data is sent. If an error occurs, it's impossible to tell
638 how much data has been sent.
639
640
641.. py:method:: Connection.set_accept_state()
642
643 Set the connection to work in server mode. The handshake will be handled
644 automatically by read/write.
645
646
647.. py:method:: Connection.set_app_data(data)
648
649 Associate *data* with this Connection object. *data* can be retrieved
650 later using the :py:meth:`get_app_data` method.
651
652
653.. py:method:: Connection.set_connect_state()
654
655 Set the connection to work in client mode. The handshake will be handled
656 automatically by read/write.
657
658
659.. py:method:: Connection.setblocking(flag)
660
661 Call the :py:meth:`setblocking` method of the underlying socket.
662
663
664.. py:method:: Connection.setsockopt(level, optname, value)
665
666 Call the :py:meth:`setsockopt` method of the underlying socket.
667
668
669.. py:method:: Connection.shutdown()
670
671 Send the shutdown message to the Connection. Returns true if the shutdown
672 message exchange is completed and false otherwise (in which case you call
673 :py:meth:`recv` or :py:meth:`send` when the connection becomes
674 readable/writeable.
675
676
677.. py:method:: Connection.get_shutdown()
678
679 Get the shutdown state of the Connection. Returns a bitvector of either or
680 both of *SENT_SHUTDOWN* and *RECEIVED_SHUTDOWN*.
681
682
683.. py:method:: Connection.set_shutdown(state)
684
685 Set the shutdown state of the Connection. *state* is a bitvector of
686 either or both of *SENT_SHUTDOWN* and *RECEIVED_SHUTDOWN*.
687
688
689.. py:method:: Connection.sock_shutdown(how)
690
691 Call the :py:meth:`shutdown` method of the underlying socket.
692
693
694.. py:method:: Connection.bio_shutdown()
695
696 If the Connection was created with a memory BIO, this method can be used to
697 indicate that *end of file* has been reached on the read end of that memory
698 BIO.
699
700
701.. py:method:: Connection.state_string()
702
703 Retrieve a verbose string detailing the state of the Connection.
704
705
706.. py:method:: Connection.client_random()
707
708 Retrieve the random value used with the client hello message.
709
710
711.. py:method:: Connection.server_random()
712
713 Retrieve the random value used with the server hello message.
714
715
716.. py:method:: Connection.master_key()
717
718 Retrieve the value of the master key for this session.
719
720
721.. py:method:: Connection.want_read()
722
723 Checks if more data has to be read from the transport layer to complete an
724 operation.
725
726
727.. py:method:: Connection.want_write()
728
729 Checks if there is data to write to the transport layer to complete an
730 operation.
731
732
733.. py:method:: Connection.set_tlsext_host_name(name)
734
735 Specify the byte string to send as the server name in the client hello message.
736
737 .. versionadded:: 0.13
738
739
740.. py:method:: Connection.get_servername()
741
742 Get the value of the server name received in the client hello message.
743
744 .. versionadded:: 0.13
745
746
Jean-Paul Calderone6c896fe2012-02-16 08:10:04 -0500747.. py:method:: Connection.get_session()
748
749 Get a :py:class:`Session` instance representing the SSL session in use by
750 the connection, or :py:obj:`None` if there is no session.
751
752 .. versionadded:: 0.14
753
754
755.. py:method:: Connection.set_session(session)
756
757 Set a new SSL session (using a :py:class:`Session` instance) to be used by
758 the connection.
759
760 .. versionadded:: 0.14
761
762
Jonathan Ballet6381da32011-07-20 16:43:38 +0900763.. Rubric:: Footnotes
764
Jonathan Balletc9e066c2011-07-17 22:56:05 +0900765.. [#connection-context-socket] Actually, all that is required is an object that
766 **behaves** like a socket, you could even use files, even though it'd be
767 tricky to get the handshakes right!