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sslproto.py26.8 KB · 740 lines
import collectionsimport warningstry:    import sslexcept ImportError:  # pragma: no cover    ssl = None from . import constantsfrom . import protocolsfrom . import transportsfrom .log import logger  def _create_transport_context(server_side, server_hostname):    if server_side:        raise ValueError('Server side SSL needs a valid SSLContext')     # Client side may pass ssl=True to use a default    # context; in that case the sslcontext passed is None.    # The default is secure for client connections.    # Python 3.4+: use up-to-date strong settings.    sslcontext = ssl.create_default_context()    if not server_hostname:        sslcontext.check_hostname = False    return sslcontext  # States of an _SSLPipe._UNWRAPPED = "UNWRAPPED"_DO_HANDSHAKE = "DO_HANDSHAKE"_WRAPPED = "WRAPPED"_SHUTDOWN = "SHUTDOWN"  class _SSLPipe(object):    """An SSL "Pipe".     An SSL pipe allows you to communicate with an SSL/TLS protocol instance    through memory buffers. It can be used to implement a security layer for an    existing connection where you don't have access to the connection's file    descriptor, or for some reason you don't want to use it.     An SSL pipe can be in "wrapped" and "unwrapped" mode. In unwrapped mode,    data is passed through untransformed. In wrapped mode, application level    data is encrypted to SSL record level data and vice versa. The SSL record    level is the lowest level in the SSL protocol suite and is what travels    as-is over the wire.     An SslPipe initially is in "unwrapped" mode. To start SSL, call    do_handshake(). To shutdown SSL again, call unwrap().    """     max_size = 256 * 1024   # Buffer size passed to read()     def __init__(self, context, server_side, server_hostname=None):        """        The *context* argument specifies the ssl.SSLContext to use.         The *server_side* argument indicates whether this is a server side or        client side transport.         The optional *server_hostname* argument can be used to specify the        hostname you are connecting to. You may only specify this parameter if        the _ssl module supports Server Name Indication (SNI).        """        self._context = context        self._server_side = server_side        self._server_hostname = server_hostname        self._state = _UNWRAPPED        self._incoming = ssl.MemoryBIO()        self._outgoing = ssl.MemoryBIO()        self._sslobj = None        self._need_ssldata = False        self._handshake_cb = None        self._shutdown_cb = None     @property    def context(self):        """The SSL context passed to the constructor."""        return self._context     @property    def ssl_object(self):        """The internal ssl.SSLObject instance.         Return None if the pipe is not wrapped.        """        return self._sslobj     @property    def need_ssldata(self):        """Whether more record level data is needed to complete a handshake        that is currently in progress."""        return self._need_ssldata     @property    def wrapped(self):        """        Whether a security layer is currently in effect.         Return False during handshake.        """        return self._state == _WRAPPED     def do_handshake(self, callback=None):        """Start the SSL handshake.         Return a list of ssldata. A ssldata element is a list of buffers         The optional *callback* argument can be used to install a callback that        will be called when the handshake is complete. The callback will be        called with None if successful, else an exception instance.        """        if self._state != _UNWRAPPED:            raise RuntimeError('handshake in progress or completed')        self._sslobj = self._context.wrap_bio(            self._incoming, self._outgoing,            server_side=self._server_side,            server_hostname=self._server_hostname)        self._state = _DO_HANDSHAKE        self._handshake_cb = callback        ssldata, appdata = self.feed_ssldata(b'', only_handshake=True)        assert len(appdata) == 0        return ssldata     def shutdown(self, callback=None):        """Start the SSL shutdown sequence.         Return a list of ssldata. A ssldata element is a list of buffers         The optional *callback* argument can be used to install a callback that        will be called when the shutdown is complete. The callback will be        called without arguments.        """        if self._state == _UNWRAPPED:            raise RuntimeError('no security layer present')        if self._state == _SHUTDOWN:            raise RuntimeError('shutdown in progress')        assert self._state in (_WRAPPED, _DO_HANDSHAKE)        self._state = _SHUTDOWN        self._shutdown_cb = callback        ssldata, appdata = self.feed_ssldata(b'')        assert appdata == [] or appdata == [b'']        return ssldata     def feed_eof(self):        """Send a potentially "ragged" EOF.         This method will raise an SSL_ERROR_EOF exception if the EOF is        unexpected.        """        self._incoming.write_eof()        ssldata, appdata = self.feed_ssldata(b'')        assert appdata == [] or appdata == [b'']     def feed_ssldata(self, data, only_handshake=False):        """Feed SSL record level data into the pipe.         The data must be a bytes instance. It is OK to send an empty bytes        instance. This can be used to get ssldata for a handshake initiated by        this endpoint.         Return a (ssldata, appdata) tuple. The ssldata element is a list of        buffers containing SSL data that needs to be sent to the remote SSL.         The appdata element is a list of buffers containing plaintext data that        needs to be forwarded to the application. The appdata list may contain        an empty buffer indicating an SSL "close_notify" alert. This alert must        be acknowledged by calling shutdown().        """        if self._state == _UNWRAPPED:            # If unwrapped, pass plaintext data straight through.            if data:                appdata = [data]            else:                appdata = []            return ([], appdata)         self._need_ssldata = False        if data:            self._incoming.write(data)         ssldata = []        appdata = []        try:            if self._state == _DO_HANDSHAKE:                # Call do_handshake() until it doesn't raise anymore.                self._sslobj.do_handshake()                self._state = _WRAPPED                if self._handshake_cb:                    self._handshake_cb(None)                if only_handshake:                    return (ssldata, appdata)                # Handshake done: execute the wrapped block             if self._state == _WRAPPED:                # Main state: read data from SSL until close_notify                while True:                    chunk = self._sslobj.read(self.max_size)                    appdata.append(chunk)                    if not chunk:  # close_notify                        break             elif self._state == _SHUTDOWN:                # Call shutdown() until it doesn't raise anymore.                self._sslobj.unwrap()                self._sslobj = None                self._state = _UNWRAPPED                if self._shutdown_cb:                    self._shutdown_cb()             elif self._state == _UNWRAPPED:                # Drain possible plaintext data after close_notify.                appdata.append(self._incoming.read())        except (ssl.SSLError, ssl.CertificateError) as exc:            exc_errno = getattr(exc, 'errno', None)            if exc_errno not in (                    ssl.SSL_ERROR_WANT_READ, ssl.SSL_ERROR_WANT_WRITE,                    ssl.SSL_ERROR_SYSCALL):                if self._state == _DO_HANDSHAKE and self._handshake_cb:                    self._handshake_cb(exc)                raise            self._need_ssldata = (exc_errno == ssl.SSL_ERROR_WANT_READ)         # Check for record level data that needs to be sent back.        # Happens for the initial handshake and renegotiations.        if self._outgoing.pending:            ssldata.append(self._outgoing.read())        return (ssldata, appdata)     def feed_appdata(self, data, offset=0):        """Feed plaintext data into the pipe.         Return an (ssldata, offset) tuple. The ssldata element is a list of        buffers containing record level data that needs to be sent to the        remote SSL instance. The offset is the number of plaintext bytes that        were processed, which may be less than the length of data.         NOTE: In case of short writes, this call MUST be retried with the SAME        buffer passed into the *data* argument (i.e. the id() must be the        same). This is an OpenSSL requirement. A further particularity is that        a short write will always have offset == 0, because the _ssl module        does not enable partial writes. And even though the offset is zero,        there will still be encrypted data in ssldata.        """        assert 0 <= offset <= len(data)        if self._state == _UNWRAPPED:            # pass through data in unwrapped mode            if offset < len(data):                ssldata = [data[offset:]]            else:                ssldata = []            return (ssldata, len(data))         ssldata = []        view = memoryview(data)        while True:            self._need_ssldata = False            try:                if offset < len(view):                    offset += self._sslobj.write(view[offset:])            except ssl.SSLError as exc:                # It is not allowed to call write() after unwrap() until the                # close_notify is acknowledged. We return the condition to the                # caller as a short write.                exc_errno = getattr(exc, 'errno', None)                if exc.reason == 'PROTOCOL_IS_SHUTDOWN':                    exc_errno = exc.errno = ssl.SSL_ERROR_WANT_READ                if exc_errno not in (ssl.SSL_ERROR_WANT_READ,                                     ssl.SSL_ERROR_WANT_WRITE,                                     ssl.SSL_ERROR_SYSCALL):                    raise                self._need_ssldata = (exc_errno == ssl.SSL_ERROR_WANT_READ)             # See if there's any record level data back for us.            if self._outgoing.pending:                ssldata.append(self._outgoing.read())            if offset == len(view) or self._need_ssldata:                break        return (ssldata, offset)  class _SSLProtocolTransport(transports._FlowControlMixin,                            transports.Transport):     _sendfile_compatible = constants._SendfileMode.FALLBACK     def __init__(self, loop, ssl_protocol):        self._loop = loop        # SSLProtocol instance        self._ssl_protocol = ssl_protocol        self._closed = False     def get_extra_info(self, name, default=None):        """Get optional transport information."""        return self._ssl_protocol._get_extra_info(name, default)     def set_protocol(self, protocol):        self._ssl_protocol._set_app_protocol(protocol)     def get_protocol(self):        return self._ssl_protocol._app_protocol     def is_closing(self):        return self._closed     def close(self):        """Close the transport.         Buffered data will be flushed asynchronously.  No more data        will be received.  After all buffered data is flushed, the        protocol's connection_lost() method will (eventually) called        with None as its argument.        """        self._closed = True        self._ssl_protocol._start_shutdown()     def __del__(self, _warn=warnings.warn):        if not self._closed:            _warn(f"unclosed transport {self!r}", ResourceWarning, source=self)            self.close()     def is_reading(self):        tr = self._ssl_protocol._transport        if tr is None:            raise RuntimeError('SSL transport has not been initialized yet')        return tr.is_reading()     def pause_reading(self):        """Pause the receiving end.         No data will be passed to the protocol's data_received()        method until resume_reading() is called.        """        self._ssl_protocol._transport.pause_reading()     def resume_reading(self):        """Resume the receiving end.         Data received will once again be passed to the protocol's        data_received() method.        """        self._ssl_protocol._transport.resume_reading()     def set_write_buffer_limits(self, high=None, low=None):        """Set the high- and low-water limits for write flow control.         These two values control when to call the protocol's        pause_writing() and resume_writing() methods.  If specified,        the low-water limit must be less than or equal to the        high-water limit.  Neither value can be negative.         The defaults are implementation-specific.  If only the        high-water limit is given, the low-water limit defaults to an        implementation-specific value less than or equal to the        high-water limit.  Setting high to zero forces low to zero as        well, and causes pause_writing() to be called whenever the        buffer becomes non-empty.  Setting low to zero causes        resume_writing() to be called only once the buffer is empty.        Use of zero for either limit is generally sub-optimal as it        reduces opportunities for doing I/O and computation        concurrently.        """        self._ssl_protocol._transport.set_write_buffer_limits(high, low)     def get_write_buffer_size(self):        """Return the current size of the write buffer."""        return self._ssl_protocol._transport.get_write_buffer_size()     def get_write_buffer_limits(self):        """Get the high and low watermarks for write flow control.         Return a tuple (low, high) where low and high are         positive number of bytes."""        return self._ssl_protocol._transport.get_write_buffer_limits()     @property    def _protocol_paused(self):        # Required for sendfile fallback pause_writing/resume_writing logic        return self._ssl_protocol._transport._protocol_paused     def write(self, data):        """Write some data bytes to the transport.         This does not block; it buffers the data and arranges for it        to be sent out asynchronously.        """        if not isinstance(data, (bytes, bytearray, memoryview)):            raise TypeError(f"data: expecting a bytes-like instance, "                            f"got {type(data).__name__}")        if not data:            return        self._ssl_protocol._write_appdata(data)     def can_write_eof(self):        """Return True if this transport supports write_eof(), False if not."""        return False     def abort(self):        """Close the transport immediately.         Buffered data will be lost.  No more data will be received.        The protocol's connection_lost() method will (eventually) be        called with None as its argument.        """        self._ssl_protocol._abort()        self._closed = True  class SSLProtocol(protocols.Protocol):    """SSL protocol.     Implementation of SSL on top of a socket using incoming and outgoing    buffers which are ssl.MemoryBIO objects.    """     def __init__(self, loop, app_protocol, sslcontext, waiter,                 server_side=False, server_hostname=None,                 call_connection_made=True,                 ssl_handshake_timeout=None):        if ssl is None:            raise RuntimeError('stdlib ssl module not available')         if ssl_handshake_timeout is None:            ssl_handshake_timeout = constants.SSL_HANDSHAKE_TIMEOUT        elif ssl_handshake_timeout <= 0:            raise ValueError(                f"ssl_handshake_timeout should be a positive number, "                f"got {ssl_handshake_timeout}")         if not sslcontext:            sslcontext = _create_transport_context(                server_side, server_hostname)         self._server_side = server_side        if server_hostname and not server_side:            self._server_hostname = server_hostname        else:            self._server_hostname = None        self._sslcontext = sslcontext        # SSL-specific extra info. More info are set when the handshake        # completes.        self._extra = dict(sslcontext=sslcontext)         # App data write buffering        self._write_backlog = collections.deque()        self._write_buffer_size = 0         self._waiter = waiter        self._loop = loop        self._set_app_protocol(app_protocol)        self._app_transport = _SSLProtocolTransport(self._loop, self)        # _SSLPipe instance (None until the connection is made)        self._sslpipe = None        self._session_established = False        self._in_handshake = False        self._in_shutdown = False        # transport, ex: SelectorSocketTransport        self._transport = None        self._call_connection_made = call_connection_made        self._ssl_handshake_timeout = ssl_handshake_timeout     def _set_app_protocol(self, app_protocol):        self._app_protocol = app_protocol        self._app_protocol_is_buffer = \            isinstance(app_protocol, protocols.BufferedProtocol)     def _wakeup_waiter(self, exc=None):        if self._waiter is None:            return        if not self._waiter.cancelled():            if exc is not None:                self._waiter.set_exception(exc)            else:                self._waiter.set_result(None)        self._waiter = None     def connection_made(self, transport):        """Called when the low-level connection is made.         Start the SSL handshake.        """        self._transport = transport        self._sslpipe = _SSLPipe(self._sslcontext,                                 self._server_side,                                 self._server_hostname)        self._start_handshake()     def connection_lost(self, exc):        """Called when the low-level connection is lost or closed.         The argument is an exception object or None (the latter        meaning a regular EOF is received or the connection was        aborted or closed).        """        if self._session_established:            self._session_established = False            self._loop.call_soon(self._app_protocol.connection_lost, exc)        else:            # Most likely an exception occurred while in SSL handshake.            # Just mark the app transport as closed so that its __del__            # doesn't complain.            if self._app_transport is not None:                self._app_transport._closed = True        self._transport = None        self._app_transport = None        if getattr(self, '_handshake_timeout_handle', None):            self._handshake_timeout_handle.cancel()        self._wakeup_waiter(exc)        self._app_protocol = None        self._sslpipe = None     def pause_writing(self):        """Called when the low-level transport's buffer goes over        the high-water mark.        """        self._app_protocol.pause_writing()     def resume_writing(self):        """Called when the low-level transport's buffer drains below        the low-water mark.        """        self._app_protocol.resume_writing()     def data_received(self, data):        """Called when some SSL data is received.         The argument is a bytes object.        """        if self._sslpipe is None:            # transport closing, sslpipe is destroyed            return         try:            ssldata, appdata = self._sslpipe.feed_ssldata(data)        except (SystemExit, KeyboardInterrupt):            raise        except BaseException as e:            self._fatal_error(e, 'SSL error in data received')            return         for chunk in ssldata:            self._transport.write(chunk)         for chunk in appdata:            if chunk:                try:                    if self._app_protocol_is_buffer:                        protocols._feed_data_to_buffered_proto(                            self._app_protocol, chunk)                    else:                        self._app_protocol.data_received(chunk)                except (SystemExit, KeyboardInterrupt):                    raise                except BaseException as ex:                    self._fatal_error(                        ex, 'application protocol failed to receive SSL data')                    return            else:                self._start_shutdown()                break     def eof_received(self):        """Called when the other end of the low-level stream        is half-closed.         If this returns a false value (including None), the transport        will close itself.  If it returns a true value, closing the        transport is up to the protocol.        """        try:            if self._loop.get_debug():                logger.debug("%r received EOF", self)             self._wakeup_waiter(ConnectionResetError)             if not self._in_handshake:                keep_open = self._app_protocol.eof_received()                if keep_open:                    logger.warning('returning true from eof_received() '                                   'has no effect when using ssl')        finally:            self._transport.close()     def _get_extra_info(self, name, default=None):        if name in self._extra:            return self._extra[name]        elif self._transport is not None:            return self._transport.get_extra_info(name, default)        else:            return default     def _start_shutdown(self):        if self._in_shutdown:            return        if self._in_handshake:            self._abort()        else:            self._in_shutdown = True            self._write_appdata(b'')     def _write_appdata(self, data):        self._write_backlog.append((data, 0))        self._write_buffer_size += len(data)        self._process_write_backlog()     def _start_handshake(self):        if self._loop.get_debug():            logger.debug("%r starts SSL handshake", self)            self._handshake_start_time = self._loop.time()        else:            self._handshake_start_time = None        self._in_handshake = True        # (b'', 1) is a special value in _process_write_backlog() to do        # the SSL handshake        self._write_backlog.append((b'', 1))        self._handshake_timeout_handle = \            self._loop.call_later(self._ssl_handshake_timeout,                                  self._check_handshake_timeout)        self._process_write_backlog()     def _check_handshake_timeout(self):        if self._in_handshake is True:            msg = (                f"SSL handshake is taking longer than "                f"{self._ssl_handshake_timeout} seconds: "                f"aborting the connection"            )            self._fatal_error(ConnectionAbortedError(msg))     def _on_handshake_complete(self, handshake_exc):        self._in_handshake = False        self._handshake_timeout_handle.cancel()         sslobj = self._sslpipe.ssl_object        try:            if handshake_exc is not None:                raise handshake_exc             peercert = sslobj.getpeercert()        except (SystemExit, KeyboardInterrupt):            raise        except BaseException as exc:            if isinstance(exc, ssl.CertificateError):                msg = 'SSL handshake failed on verifying the certificate'            else:                msg = 'SSL handshake failed'            self._fatal_error(exc, msg)            return         if self._loop.get_debug():            dt = self._loop.time() - self._handshake_start_time            logger.debug("%r: SSL handshake took %.1f ms", self, dt * 1e3)         # Add extra info that becomes available after handshake.        self._extra.update(peercert=peercert,                           cipher=sslobj.cipher(),                           compression=sslobj.compression(),                           ssl_object=sslobj,                           )        if self._call_connection_made:            self._app_protocol.connection_made(self._app_transport)        self._wakeup_waiter()        self._session_established = True        # In case transport.write() was already called. Don't call        # immediately _process_write_backlog(), but schedule it:        # _on_handshake_complete() can be called indirectly from        # _process_write_backlog(), and _process_write_backlog() is not        # reentrant.        self._loop.call_soon(self._process_write_backlog)     def _process_write_backlog(self):        # Try to make progress on the write backlog.        if self._transport is None or self._sslpipe is None:            return         try:            for i in range(len(self._write_backlog)):                data, offset = self._write_backlog[0]                if data:                    ssldata, offset = self._sslpipe.feed_appdata(data, offset)                elif offset:                    ssldata = self._sslpipe.do_handshake(                        self._on_handshake_complete)                    offset = 1                else:                    ssldata = self._sslpipe.shutdown(self._finalize)                    offset = 1                 for chunk in ssldata:                    self._transport.write(chunk)                 if offset < len(data):                    self._write_backlog[0] = (data, offset)                    # A short write means that a write is blocked on a read                    # We need to enable reading if it is paused!                    assert self._sslpipe.need_ssldata                    if self._transport._paused:                        self._transport.resume_reading()                    break                 # An entire chunk from the backlog was processed. We can                # delete it and reduce the outstanding buffer size.                del self._write_backlog[0]                self._write_buffer_size -= len(data)        except (SystemExit, KeyboardInterrupt):            raise        except BaseException as exc:            if self._in_handshake:                # Exceptions will be re-raised in _on_handshake_complete.                self._on_handshake_complete(exc)            else:                self._fatal_error(exc, 'Fatal error on SSL transport')     def _fatal_error(self, exc, message='Fatal error on transport'):        if isinstance(exc, OSError):            if self._loop.get_debug():                logger.debug("%r: %s", self, message, exc_info=True)        else:            self._loop.call_exception_handler({                'message': message,                'exception': exc,                'transport': self._transport,                'protocol': self,            })        if self._transport:            self._transport._force_close(exc)     def _finalize(self):        self._sslpipe = None         if self._transport is not None:            self._transport.close()     def _abort(self):        try:            if self._transport is not None:                self._transport.abort()        finally:            self._finalize()