Reputation: 192891
I need to write a script that connects to a bunch of sites on our corporate intranet over HTTPS and verifies that their SSL certificates are valid; that they are not expired, that they are issued for the correct address, etc. We use our own internal corporate Certificate Authority for these sites, so we have the public key of the CA to verify the certificates against.
Python by default just accepts and uses SSL certificates when using HTTPS, so even if a certificate is invalid, Python libraries such as urllib2 and Twisted will just happily use the certificate.
How do I verify a certificate in Python?
Upvotes: 92
Views: 249590
Reputation: 1642
Or simply make your life easier by using the requests library:
import requests
requests.get('https://somesite.com', verify='/path/server.crt')
A few more words about its usage.
Upvotes: 15
Reputation: 31130
M2Crypto can do the validation. You can also use M2Crypto with Twisted if you like. The Chandler desktop client uses Twisted for networking and M2Crypto for SSL, including certificate validation.
Based on Glyphs comment it seems like M2Crypto does better certificate verification by default than what you can do with pyOpenSSL currently, because M2Crypto checks subjectAltName field too.
I've also blogged on how to get the certificates Mozilla Firefox ships with in Python and usable with Python SSL solutions.
Upvotes: 8
Reputation: 1072
The following code allows you to benefit from all SSL validation checks (e.g. date validity, CA certificate chain ...) EXCEPT a pluggable verification step e.g. to verify the hostname or do other additional certificate verification steps.
from httplib import HTTPSConnection
import ssl
def create_custom_HTTPSConnection(host):
def verify_cert(cert, host):
# Write your code here
# You can certainly base yourself on ssl.match_hostname
# Raise ssl.CertificateError if verification fails
print 'Host:', host
print 'Peer cert:', cert
class CustomHTTPSConnection(HTTPSConnection, object):
def connect(self):
super(CustomHTTPSConnection, self).connect()
cert = self.sock.getpeercert()
verify_cert(cert, host)
context = ssl.create_default_context()
context.check_hostname = False
return CustomHTTPSConnection(host=host, context=context)
if __name__ == '__main__':
# try expired.badssl.com or self-signed.badssl.com !
conn = create_custom_HTTPSConnection('badssl.com')
conn.request('GET', '/')
conn.getresponse().read()
Upvotes: 4
Reputation: 35761
From release version 2.7.9/3.4.3 on, Python by default attempts to perform certificate validation.
This has been proposed in PEP 467, which is worth a read: https://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0476/
The changes affect all relevant stdlib modules (urllib/urllib2, http, httplib).
Relevant documentation:
https://docs.python.org/2/library/httplib.html#httplib.HTTPSConnection
This class now performs all the necessary certificate and hostname checks by default. To revert to the previous, unverified, behavior ssl._create_unverified_context() can be passed to the context parameter.
https://docs.python.org/3/library/http.client.html#http.client.HTTPSConnection
Changed in version 3.4.3: This class now performs all the necessary certificate and hostname checks by default. To revert to the previous, unverified, behavior ssl._create_unverified_context() can be passed to the context parameter.
Note that the new built-in verification is based on the system-provided certificate database. Opposed to that, the requests package ships its own certificate bundle. Pros and cons of both approaches are discussed in the Trust database section of PEP 476.
Upvotes: 22
Reputation: 14898
I was having the same problem but wanted to minimize 3rd party dependencies (because this one-off script was to be executed by many users). My solution was to wrap a curl
call and make sure that the exit code was 0
. Worked like a charm.
Upvotes: -1
Reputation: 19212
PycURL does this beautifully.
Below is a short example. It will throw a pycurl.error
if something is fishy, where you get a tuple with error code and a human readable message.
import pycurl
curl = pycurl.Curl()
curl.setopt(pycurl.CAINFO, "myFineCA.crt")
curl.setopt(pycurl.SSL_VERIFYPEER, 1)
curl.setopt(pycurl.SSL_VERIFYHOST, 2)
curl.setopt(pycurl.URL, "https://internal.stuff/")
curl.perform()
You will probably want to configure more options, like where to store the results, etc. But no need to clutter the example with non-essentials.
Example of what exceptions might be raised:
(60, 'Peer certificate cannot be authenticated with known CA certificates')
(51, "common name 'CN=something.else.stuff,O=Example Corp,C=SE' does not match 'internal.stuff'")
Some links that I found useful are the libcurl-docs for setopt and getinfo.
Upvotes: 26
Reputation: 31860
You can use Twisted to verify certificates. The main API is CertificateOptions, which can be provided as the contextFactory
argument to various functions such as listenSSL and startTLS.
Unfortunately, neither Python nor Twisted comes with a the pile of CA certificates required to actually do HTTPS validation, nor the HTTPS validation logic. Due to a limitation in PyOpenSSL, you can't do it completely correctly just yet, but thanks to the fact that almost all certificates include a subject commonName, you can get close enough.
Here is a naive sample implementation of a verifying Twisted HTTPS client which ignores wildcards and subjectAltName extensions, and uses the certificate-authority certificates present in the 'ca-certificates' package in most Ubuntu distributions. Try it with your favorite valid and invalid certificate sites :).
import os
import glob
from OpenSSL.SSL import Context, TLSv1_METHOD, VERIFY_PEER, VERIFY_FAIL_IF_NO_PEER_CERT, OP_NO_SSLv2
from OpenSSL.crypto import load_certificate, FILETYPE_PEM
from twisted.python.urlpath import URLPath
from twisted.internet.ssl import ContextFactory
from twisted.internet import reactor
from twisted.web.client import getPage
certificateAuthorityMap = {}
for certFileName in glob.glob("/etc/ssl/certs/*.pem"):
# There might be some dead symlinks in there, so let's make sure it's real.
if os.path.exists(certFileName):
data = open(certFileName).read()
x509 = load_certificate(FILETYPE_PEM, data)
digest = x509.digest('sha1')
# Now, de-duplicate in case the same cert has multiple names.
certificateAuthorityMap[digest] = x509
class HTTPSVerifyingContextFactory(ContextFactory):
def __init__(self, hostname):
self.hostname = hostname
isClient = True
def getContext(self):
ctx = Context(TLSv1_METHOD)
store = ctx.get_cert_store()
for value in certificateAuthorityMap.values():
store.add_cert(value)
ctx.set_verify(VERIFY_PEER | VERIFY_FAIL_IF_NO_PEER_CERT, self.verifyHostname)
ctx.set_options(OP_NO_SSLv2)
return ctx
def verifyHostname(self, connection, x509, errno, depth, preverifyOK):
if preverifyOK:
if self.hostname != x509.get_subject().commonName:
return False
return preverifyOK
def secureGet(url):
return getPage(url, HTTPSVerifyingContextFactory(URLPath.fromString(url).netloc))
def done(result):
print 'Done!', len(result)
secureGet("https://google.com/").addCallback(done)
reactor.run()
Upvotes: 26
Reputation: 192891
Here's an example script which demonstrates certificate validation:
import httplib
import re
import socket
import sys
import urllib2
import ssl
class InvalidCertificateException(httplib.HTTPException, urllib2.URLError):
def __init__(self, host, cert, reason):
httplib.HTTPException.__init__(self)
self.host = host
self.cert = cert
self.reason = reason
def __str__(self):
return ('Host %s returned an invalid certificate (%s) %s\n' %
(self.host, self.reason, self.cert))
class CertValidatingHTTPSConnection(httplib.HTTPConnection):
default_port = httplib.HTTPS_PORT
def __init__(self, host, port=None, key_file=None, cert_file=None,
ca_certs=None, strict=None, **kwargs):
httplib.HTTPConnection.__init__(self, host, port, strict, **kwargs)
self.key_file = key_file
self.cert_file = cert_file
self.ca_certs = ca_certs
if self.ca_certs:
self.cert_reqs = ssl.CERT_REQUIRED
else:
self.cert_reqs = ssl.CERT_NONE
def _GetValidHostsForCert(self, cert):
if 'subjectAltName' in cert:
return [x[1] for x in cert['subjectAltName']
if x[0].lower() == 'dns']
else:
return [x[0][1] for x in cert['subject']
if x[0][0].lower() == 'commonname']
def _ValidateCertificateHostname(self, cert, hostname):
hosts = self._GetValidHostsForCert(cert)
for host in hosts:
host_re = host.replace('.', '\.').replace('*', '[^.]*')
if re.search('^%s$' % (host_re,), hostname, re.I):
return True
return False
def connect(self):
sock = socket.create_connection((self.host, self.port))
self.sock = ssl.wrap_socket(sock, keyfile=self.key_file,
certfile=self.cert_file,
cert_reqs=self.cert_reqs,
ca_certs=self.ca_certs)
if self.cert_reqs & ssl.CERT_REQUIRED:
cert = self.sock.getpeercert()
hostname = self.host.split(':', 0)[0]
if not self._ValidateCertificateHostname(cert, hostname):
raise InvalidCertificateException(hostname, cert,
'hostname mismatch')
class VerifiedHTTPSHandler(urllib2.HTTPSHandler):
def __init__(self, **kwargs):
urllib2.AbstractHTTPHandler.__init__(self)
self._connection_args = kwargs
def https_open(self, req):
def http_class_wrapper(host, **kwargs):
full_kwargs = dict(self._connection_args)
full_kwargs.update(kwargs)
return CertValidatingHTTPSConnection(host, **full_kwargs)
try:
return self.do_open(http_class_wrapper, req)
except urllib2.URLError, e:
if type(e.reason) == ssl.SSLError and e.reason.args[0] == 1:
raise InvalidCertificateException(req.host, '',
e.reason.args[1])
raise
https_request = urllib2.HTTPSHandler.do_request_
if __name__ == "__main__":
if len(sys.argv) != 3:
print "usage: python %s CA_CERT URL" % sys.argv[0]
exit(2)
handler = VerifiedHTTPSHandler(ca_certs = sys.argv[1])
opener = urllib2.build_opener(handler)
print opener.open(sys.argv[2]).read()
Upvotes: 14
Reputation: 131
Jython DOES carry out certificate verification by default, so using standard library modules, e.g. httplib.HTTPSConnection, etc, with jython will verify certificates and give exceptions for failures, i.e. mismatched identities, expired certs, etc.
In fact, you have to do some extra work to get jython to behave like cpython, i.e. to get jython to NOT verify certs.
I have written a blog post on how to disable certificate checking on jython, because it can be useful in testing phases, etc.
Installing an all-trusting security provider on java and jython.
http://jython.xhaus.com/installing-an-all-trusting-security-provider-on-java-and-jython/
Upvotes: 4
Reputation: 89325
I have added a distribution to the Python Package Index which makes the match_hostname()
function from the Python 3.2 ssl
package available on previous versions of Python.
http://pypi.python.org/pypi/backports.ssl_match_hostname/
You can install it with:
pip install backports.ssl_match_hostname
Or you can make it a dependency listed in your project's setup.py
. Either way, it can be used like this:
from backports.ssl_match_hostname import match_hostname, CertificateError
...
sslsock = ssl.wrap_socket(sock, ssl_version=ssl.PROTOCOL_SSLv3,
cert_reqs=ssl.CERT_REQUIRED, ca_certs=...)
try:
match_hostname(sslsock.getpeercert(), hostname)
except CertificateError, ce:
...
Upvotes: 31
Reputation: 4694
pyOpenSSL is an interface to the OpenSSL library. It should provide everything you need.
Upvotes: -1