parent
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commit
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@ -1,3 +1,9 @@
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2017-04-03 Ray Brown <ray@Virtor10>
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Release 1.2.0
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* README.md: Release updates
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2017-04-02 Ray Brown <code@liquibits.com>
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Release 1.2.0 Preparation
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66
README.md
66
README.md
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============================================
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Datagram Transport Layer Security for Python
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============================================
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# Datagram Transport Layer Security for Python
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PyDTLS brings Datagram Transport Layer Security (DTLS - RFC 6347:
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http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6347) to the Python environment. In a
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@ -13,8 +11,9 @@ DTLS is now very easy to use in Python. If you're familiar with the
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ssl module in Python's standard library, you already know how. All it
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takes is passing a datagram/UDP socket to the *wrap_socket* function
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instead of a stream/TCP socket. Here's how one sets up the client side
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of a connection::
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of a connection:
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```
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import ssl
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from socket import socket, AF_INET, SOCK_DGRAM
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from dtls import do_patch
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sock = ssl.wrap_socket(socket(AF_INET, SOCK_DGRAM))
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sock.connect(('foo.bar.com', 1234))
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sock.send('Hi there')
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```
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Design Goals
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============
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As of version 1.2.0, PyDTLS supports DTLS version 1.2 in addition to
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version 1.0. This version also introduces forward secrecy using
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elliptic curve cryptography and more fine-grained configuration options.
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## Design Goals
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The primary design goal of PyDTLS is broad availability. It has therefore
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been built to be widely compatible with the following:
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expects to go through server-side bind/listen/accept connection
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establishment should be reusable with PyDTLS sockets.
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Distributions
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=============
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## Distributions
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PyDTLS requires version 1.0.0 or higher of the OpenSSL
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library. Earlier versions are reported not to offer stable DTLS
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@ -67,14 +69,15 @@ no further installation steps.
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In comparison, installation of OpenSSL on Microsoft Windows operating
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systems is inconvenient. For this reason, source distributions of
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PyDTLS are available that include OpenSSL dll's for 32-bit and 64-bit
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Windows. For 32-bit Windows, a version built with the MinGW toolchain
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is also available. Its archive includes stripped as well as
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non-stripped dll's. The latter can be debugged with gdb on
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Windows. All dll's have been linked with the Visual Studio 2008
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version of the Microsoft C runtime library, msvcr90.dll, the version
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used by CPython 2.7. Installation of Microsoft redistributable runtime
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packages should therefore not be required on machines with CPython
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2.7. The version of OpenSSL distributed with PyDTLS 0.1.0 is 1.0.1c.
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The version distributed with PyDTLS 1.2.0 is commit
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248cf959672041f38f4d80a4a09ee01d8ab04fe8 (branch OpenSSL_1_0_2-stable,
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1.0.2l-dev, containing a desirable fix to DTLSv1_listen not present
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in 1.0.2k, the stable version at the time of PyDTLS 1.2.0 release).
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The OpenSSL version used by PyDTLS can be determined from the values
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of *sslconnection's* DTLS_OPENSSL_VERSION_NUMBER,
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called (see below). Note that the OpenSSL version used by PyDTLS may
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differ from the one used by the *ssl* module.
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Interfaces
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==========
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## Interfaces
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PyDTLS' top-level package, *dtls*, provides DTLS support through the
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**SSLConnection** class of its *sslconnection*
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remain identical when interfacing with *ssl* across stream and
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datagram sockets.
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Connection Handling
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===================
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## Connection Handling
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The DTLS protocol implies a connection as an association between two
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network peers where the overall association state is characterized by the
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expected. Note that when using the *ssl* interface to *dtls*, *listen*
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must be called before calling *accept*.
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Demultiplexing
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==============
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## Demultiplexing
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At the network io layer, only datagrams from its connected peer must be
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passed to a **SSLConnection** or **SSLSocket** object (unless the object
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is unconnected on the server-side, in which case in can be in listening
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is unconnected on the server-side, in which case it can be in listening
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mode, the initial server-side socket whose role it is to listen for
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incoming client connection requests).
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datagram. *accept* must return so that the application can iterate on
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its asynchronous *select* loop.
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Shutdown and Unwrapping
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=======================
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## Shutdown and Unwrapping
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PyDTLS implements the SSL/TLS shutdown protocol as it has been adapted
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for DTLS. **SSLConnection's** *shutdown* and **SSLSocket's** *unwrap*
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constructor. If *osnet* is used, an actual *socket.socket* instance is
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returned.
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Framework Compatibility
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=======================
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## Framework Compatibility
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PyDTLS sockets have been tested under the following usage modes:
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server framework SocketServer - ThreadingTCPServer (this works
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because of PyDTLS's emulation of connection-related calls)
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Multi-thread Support
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====================
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## Multi-thread Support
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Using multiple threads with OpenSSL requires implementing a locking
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callback. PyDTLS does implement this, and therefore multi-threaded
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*ssl*. On Ubuntu 12.04, for example, this is the case, but on
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Microsoft Windows it is not.
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Testing
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=======
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## Testing
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A simple echo server is available to be executed from the project root
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directory with `python -m dtls.test.echo_seq`. The echo server is
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reachable using the code snippet at the top of this document, using port
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28000 at "localhost".
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Unit test suites can be executed from the project root directory with
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`python -m dtls.test.unit [-v]` and `python -m dtls.test.unit_wrapper`
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(for the client and server wrappers)
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Almost all of the Python standard library's *ssl* unit tests from the
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module *test_ssl.py* have been ported to *dtls.test.unit.py*. All tests
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gained by observing the operation of test_perf.py, including software
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stack behavior in the presence of some amount of packet loss.
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Logging
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=======
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## Logging
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The *dtls* package and its sub-packages log various occurrences,
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primarily events that can aid debugging. Especially *router* emits many
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messages when the logging level is set to at least *logging.DEBUG*.
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dtls/test/echo_seq.py activates this logging level during its operation.
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Currently Supported Platforms
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=============================
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## Currently Supported Platforms
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At the time of initial release, PyDTLS 0.1.0 has been tested on Ubuntu
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12.04.1 LTS 32-bit and 64-bit, as well as Microsoft Windows 7 32-bit
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and 64-bit, using CPython 2.7.3. Patches with additional platform
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ports are welcome.
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As of release 1.2.0, PyDTLS is tested on Ubuntu 16.04 LTS as well as
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Microsoft Windows 10, using CPython 2.7.13.
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Loading…
Reference in New Issue