:mod:`ssl` -- SSL/TLS module ============================ .. module:: ssl :synopsis: TLS/SSL wrapper for socket objects |see_cpython_module| :mod:`python:ssl`. This module provides access to Transport Layer Security (previously and widely known as “Secure Sockets Layer”) encryption and peer authentication facilities for network sockets, both client-side and server-side. Functions --------- .. function:: ssl.wrap_socket(sock, server_side=False, keyfile=None, certfile=None, cert_reqs=CERT_NONE, ca_certs=None, do_handshake=True) Takes a `stream` *sock* (usually socket.socket instance of ``SOCK_STREAM`` type), and returns an instance of ssl.SSLSocket, which wraps the underlying stream in an SSL context. Returned object has the usual `stream` interface methods like ``read()``, ``write()``, etc. A server-side SSL socket should be created from a normal socket returned from :meth:`~socket.socket.accept()` on a non-SSL listening server socket. - *do_handshake* determines whether the handshake is done as part of the ``wrap_socket`` or whether it is deferred to be done as part of the initial reads or writes (there is no ``do_handshake`` method as in CPython). For blocking sockets doing the handshake immediately is standard. For non-blocking sockets (i.e. when the *sock* passed into ``wrap_socket`` is in non-blocking mode) the handshake should generally be deferred because otherwise ``wrap_socket`` blocks until it completes. Note that in AXTLS the handshake can be deferred until the first read or write but it then blocks until completion. Depending on the underlying module implementation in a particular :term:`MicroPython port`, some or all keyword arguments above may be not supported. .. warning:: Some implementations of ``ssl`` module do NOT validate server certificates, which makes an SSL connection established prone to man-in-the-middle attacks. CPython's ``wrap_socket`` returns an ``SSLSocket`` object which has methods typical for sockets, such as ``send``, ``recv``, etc. MicroPython's ``wrap_socket`` returns an object more similar to CPython's ``SSLObject`` which does not have these socket methods. Exceptions ---------- .. data:: ssl.SSLError This exception does NOT exist. Instead its base class, OSError, is used. Constants --------- .. data:: ssl.CERT_NONE ssl.CERT_OPTIONAL ssl.CERT_REQUIRED Supported values for *cert_reqs* parameter.