Reputation: 311
I have configured my server to serve only https creating a self-signed certificate. I have a client that I has to validate the server's certificate and after that will download a file from the server.
How do I implement the validation in client? Is there any code example?
My question is similar with this one: How can the SSL client validate the server's certificate? but although the fine explanation, I didn't find any help.
So far, in my code I create a directory and then I download the file with urllib2:
[...] #imports
def dir_creation(path):
try:
os.makedirs(path)
except OSError as exception:
if exception.errno != errno.EEXIST:
raise
def file_download(url):
ver_file = urllib2.urlopen(url)
data = ver_file.read()
with open(local_filename, "wb") as code:
code.write(data)
dir_creation(path)
file_download(url)
Upvotes: 3
Views: 7313
Reputation: 5684
Rather than configuring your server to present a self-signed certificate, you should use a self-signed certificate as a certificate authority to sign the server certificate. (How to do this is beyond the scope of your question, but I'm sure you can find help on Stack Overflow or elsewhere.)
Now you must configure your client to trust your certificate authority. In python (2.7.9 or later), you can do this using the ssl
module:
import ssl
... # create socket
ctx = ssl.create_default_context(cafile=path_to_ca_certificate)
sslsock = ctx.wrap_socket(sock)
You can then transmit and read data on the secure socket. See the ssl
module documentation for more explanation.
The urllib2
API is simpler:
import urllib2
resp = urllib2.urlopen(url, cafile=path_to_ca_certificate)
resp_body = resp.read()
If you wish to use Requests, according to the documentation you can supply a path to the CA certificate as the argument to the verify
parameter:
resp = requests.get(url, verify=path_to_ca_certificate)
Upvotes: 3