Lib.ssl.py Maven / Gradle / Ivy
Go to download
Show more of this group Show more artifacts with this name
Show all versions of jython-standalone Show documentation
Show all versions of jython-standalone Show documentation
Jython is an implementation of the high-level, dynamic, object-oriented
language Python written in 100% Pure Java, and seamlessly integrated with
the Java platform. It thus allows you to run Python on any Java platform.
import base64
import errno
import logging
import os.path
import textwrap
import time
import threading
try:
# jarjar-ed version
from org.python.netty.channel import ChannelInitializer
from org.python.netty.handler.ssl import SslHandler
except ImportError:
# dev version from extlibs
from io.netty.channel import ChannelInitializer
from io.netty.handler.ssl import SslHandler
from _socket import (
SSLError, raises_java_exception,
SSL_ERROR_SSL,
SSL_ERROR_WANT_READ,
SSL_ERROR_WANT_WRITE,
SSL_ERROR_WANT_X509_LOOKUP,
SSL_ERROR_SYSCALL,
SSL_ERROR_ZERO_RETURN,
SSL_ERROR_WANT_CONNECT,
SSL_ERROR_EOF,
SSL_ERROR_INVALID_ERROR_CODE,
error as socket_error)
from _sslcerts import _get_ssl_context
from java.text import SimpleDateFormat
from java.util import ArrayList, Locale, TimeZone
from java.util.concurrent import CountDownLatch
from javax.naming.ldap import LdapName
from javax.security.auth.x500 import X500Principal
log = logging.getLogger("_socket")
# Pretend to be OpenSSL
OPENSSL_VERSION = "OpenSSL 1.0.0 (as emulated by Java SSL)"
OPENSSL_VERSION_NUMBER = 0x1000000L
OPENSSL_VERSION_INFO = (1, 0, 0, 0, 0)
CERT_NONE, CERT_OPTIONAL, CERT_REQUIRED = range(3)
# Do not support PROTOCOL_SSLv2, it is highly insecure and it is optional
_, PROTOCOL_SSLv3, PROTOCOL_SSLv23, PROTOCOL_TLSv1 = range(4)
_PROTOCOL_NAMES = {
PROTOCOL_SSLv3: 'SSLv3',
PROTOCOL_SSLv23: 'SSLv23',
PROTOCOL_TLSv1: 'TLSv1'}
_rfc2822_date_format = SimpleDateFormat("MMM dd HH:mm:ss yyyy z", Locale.US)
_rfc2822_date_format.setTimeZone(TimeZone.getTimeZone("GMT"))
_ldap_rdn_display_names = {
# list from RFC 2253
"CN": "commonName",
"L": "localityName",
"ST": "stateOrProvinceName",
"O": "organizationName",
"OU": "organizationalUnitName",
"C": "countryName",
"STREET": "streetAddress",
"DC": "domainComponent",
"UID": "userid"
}
_cert_name_types = [
# Fields documented in
# http://docs.oracle.com/javase/7/docs/api/java/security/cert/X509Certificate.html#getSubjectAlternativeNames()
"other",
"rfc822",
"DNS",
"x400Address",
"directory",
"ediParty",
"uniformResourceIdentifier",
"ipAddress",
"registeredID"]
class SSLInitializer(ChannelInitializer):
def __init__(self, ssl_handler):
self.ssl_handler = ssl_handler
def initChannel(self, ch):
pipeline = ch.pipeline()
pipeline.addFirst("ssl", self.ssl_handler)
class SSLSocket(object):
def __init__(self, sock,
keyfile, certfile, ca_certs,
do_handshake_on_connect, server_side):
self.sock = sock
self.do_handshake_on_connect = do_handshake_on_connect
self._sock = sock._sock # the real underlying socket
self.context = _get_ssl_context(keyfile, certfile, ca_certs)
self.engine = self.context.createSSLEngine()
self.server_side = server_side
self.engine.setUseClientMode(not server_side)
self.ssl_handler = None
# _sslobj is used to follow CPython convention that an object
# means we have handshaked, as used by existing code that
# looks at this internal
self._sslobj = None
self.handshake_count = 0
if self.do_handshake_on_connect and self.sock._sock.connected:
self.do_handshake()
def connect(self, addr):
log.debug("Connect SSL with handshaking %s", self.do_handshake_on_connect, extra={"sock": self._sock})
self._sock._connect(addr)
if self.do_handshake_on_connect:
self.do_handshake()
def connect_ex(self, addr):
log.debug("Connect SSL with handshaking %s", self.do_handshake_on_connect, extra={"sock": self._sock})
self._sock._connect(addr)
if self.do_handshake_on_connect:
self.do_handshake()
return self._sock.connect_ex(addr)
def unwrap(self):
self._sock.channel.pipeline().remove("ssl")
self.ssl_handler.close()
return self._sock
def do_handshake(self):
log.debug("SSL handshaking", extra={"sock": self._sock})
def handshake_step(result):
log.debug("SSL handshaking completed %s", result, extra={"sock": self._sock})
if not hasattr(self._sock, "active_latch"):
log.debug("Post connect step", extra={"sock": self._sock})
self._sock._post_connect()
self._sock._unlatch()
self._sslobj = object() # we have now handshaked
self._notify_selectors()
if self.ssl_handler is None:
self.ssl_handler = SslHandler(self.engine)
self.ssl_handler.handshakeFuture().addListener(handshake_step)
if hasattr(self._sock, "connected") and self._sock.connected:
# The underlying socket is already connected, so some extra work to manage
log.debug("Adding SSL handler to pipeline after connection", extra={"sock": self._sock})
self._sock.channel.pipeline().addFirst("ssl", self.ssl_handler)
else:
log.debug("Not connected, adding SSL initializer...", extra={"sock": self._sock})
self._sock.connect_handlers.append(SSLInitializer(self.ssl_handler))
handshake = self.ssl_handler.handshakeFuture()
time.sleep(0.001) # Necessary apparently for the handler to get into a good state
try:
self._sock._handle_channel_future(handshake, "SSL handshake")
except socket_error, e:
raise SSLError(SSL_ERROR_SSL, e.strerror)
# Various pass through methods to the wrapped socket
def send(self, data):
return self.sock.send(data)
write = send
def sendall(self, data):
return self.sock.sendall(data)
def recv(self, bufsize, flags=0):
return self.sock.recv(bufsize, flags)
read = recv
def recvfrom(self, bufsize, flags=0):
return self.sock.recvfrom(bufsize, flags)
def recvfrom_into(self, buffer, nbytes=0, flags=0):
return self.sock.recvfrom_into(buffer, nbytes, flags)
def recv_into(self, buffer, nbytes=0, flags=0):
return self.sock.recv_into(buffer, nbytes, flags)
def sendto(self, string, arg1, arg2=None):
raise socket_error(errno.EPROTO)
def close(self):
self.sock.close()
def setblocking(self, mode):
self.sock.setblocking(mode)
def settimeout(self, timeout):
self.sock.settimeout(timeout)
def gettimeout(self):
return self.sock.gettimeout()
def makefile(self, mode='r', bufsize=-1):
return self.sock.makefile(mode, bufsize)
def shutdown(self, how):
self.sock.shutdown(how)
# Need to work with the real underlying socket as well
def pending(self):
# undocumented function, used by some tests
# see also http://bugs.python.org/issue21430
return self._sock._pending()
def _readable(self):
return self._sock._readable()
def _writable(self):
return self._sock._writable()
def _register_selector(self, selector):
self._sock._register_selector(selector)
def _unregister_selector(self, selector):
return self._sock._unregister_selector(selector)
def _notify_selectors(self):
self._sock._notify_selectors()
def getpeername(self):
return self.sock.getpeername()
def fileno(self):
return self
@raises_java_exception
def getpeercert(self, binary_form=False):
cert = self.engine.getSession().getPeerCertificates()[0]
if binary_form:
return cert.getEncoded()
dn = cert.getSubjectX500Principal().getName()
ldapDN = LdapName(dn)
# FIXME given this tuple of a single element tuple structure assumed here, is it possible this is
# not actually the case, eg because of multi value attributes?
rdns = tuple((((_ldap_rdn_display_names.get(rdn.type), rdn.value),) for rdn in ldapDN.getRdns()))
# FIXME is it str? or utf8? or some other encoding? maybe a bug in cpython?
alt_names = tuple(((_cert_name_types[type], str(name)) for (type, name) in cert.getSubjectAlternativeNames()))
pycert = {
"notAfter": _rfc2822_date_format.format(cert.getNotAfter()),
"subject": rdns,
"subjectAltName": alt_names,
}
return pycert
@raises_java_exception
def issuer(self):
return self.getpeercert().getIssuerDN().toString()
def cipher(self):
session = self._sslsocket.session
suite = str(session.cipherSuite)
if "256" in suite: # FIXME!!! this test usually works, but there must be a better approach
strength = 256
elif "128" in suite:
strength = 128
else:
strength = None
return suite, str(session.protocol), strength
# instantiates a SSLEngine, with the following things to keep in mind:
# FIXME not yet supported
# suppress_ragged_eofs - presumably this is an exception we can detect in Netty, the underlying SSLEngine certainly does
# ssl_version - use SSLEngine.setEnabledProtocols(java.lang.String[])
# ciphers - SSLEngine.setEnabledCipherSuites(String[] suites)
@raises_java_exception
def wrap_socket(sock, keyfile=None, certfile=None, server_side=False, cert_reqs=CERT_NONE,
ssl_version=None, ca_certs=None, do_handshake_on_connect=True,
suppress_ragged_eofs=True, ciphers=None):
return SSLSocket(
sock,
keyfile=keyfile, certfile=certfile, ca_certs=ca_certs,
server_side=server_side,
do_handshake_on_connect=do_handshake_on_connect)
# some utility functions
def cert_time_to_seconds(cert_time):
"""Takes a date-time string in standard ASN1_print form
("MON DAY 24HOUR:MINUTE:SEC YEAR TIMEZONE") and return
a Python time value in seconds past the epoch."""
import time
return time.mktime(time.strptime(cert_time, "%b %d %H:%M:%S %Y GMT"))
PEM_HEADER = "-----BEGIN CERTIFICATE-----"
PEM_FOOTER = "-----END CERTIFICATE-----"
def DER_cert_to_PEM_cert(der_cert_bytes):
"""Takes a certificate in binary DER format and returns the
PEM version of it as a string."""
if hasattr(base64, 'standard_b64encode'):
# preferred because older API gets line-length wrong
f = base64.standard_b64encode(der_cert_bytes)
return (PEM_HEADER + '\n' +
textwrap.fill(f, 64) + '\n' +
PEM_FOOTER + '\n')
else:
return (PEM_HEADER + '\n' +
base64.encodestring(der_cert_bytes) +
PEM_FOOTER + '\n')
def PEM_cert_to_DER_cert(pem_cert_string):
"""Takes a certificate in ASCII PEM format and returns the
DER-encoded version of it as a byte sequence"""
if not pem_cert_string.startswith(PEM_HEADER):
raise ValueError("Invalid PEM encoding; must start with %s"
% PEM_HEADER)
if not pem_cert_string.strip().endswith(PEM_FOOTER):
raise ValueError("Invalid PEM encoding; must end with %s"
% PEM_FOOTER)
d = pem_cert_string.strip()[len(PEM_HEADER):-len(PEM_FOOTER)]
return base64.decodestring(d)
def get_server_certificate(addr, ssl_version=PROTOCOL_SSLv3, ca_certs=None):
"""Retrieve the certificate from the server at the specified address,
and return it as a PEM-encoded string.
If 'ca_certs' is specified, validate the server cert against it.
If 'ssl_version' is specified, use it in the connection attempt."""
host, port = addr
if (ca_certs is not None):
cert_reqs = CERT_REQUIRED
else:
cert_reqs = CERT_NONE
s = wrap_socket(socket(), ssl_version=ssl_version,
cert_reqs=cert_reqs, ca_certs=ca_certs)
s.connect(addr)
dercert = s.getpeercert(True)
s.close()
return DER_cert_to_PEM_cert(dercert)
def get_protocol_name(protocol_code):
return _PROTOCOL_NAMES.get(protocol_code, '')
# a replacement for the old socket.ssl function
def sslwrap_simple(sock, keyfile=None, certfile=None):
"""A replacement for the old socket.ssl function. Designed
for compability with Python 2.5 and earlier. Will disappear in
Python 3.0."""
ssl_sock = wrap_socket(sock, keyfile=keyfile, certfile=certfile, ssl_version=PROTOCOL_SSLv23)
try:
sock.getpeername()
except socket_error:
# no, no connection yet
pass
else:
# yes, do the handshake
ssl_sock.do_handshake()
return ssl_sock
# Underlying Java does a good job of managing entropy, so these are just no-ops
def RAND_status():
return True
def RAND_egd(path):
if os.path.abspath(str(path)) != path:
raise TypeError("Must be an absolute path, but ignoring it regardless")
def RAND_add(bytes, entropy):
pass