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| PEP: 476 | |
| Title: Enabling certificate verification by default for stdlib http clients | |
| Version: $Revision$ | |
| Last-Modified: $Date$ | |
| Author: Alex Gaynor <alex.gaynor@gmail.com> | |
| Status: Final | |
| Type: Standards Track | |
| Content-Type: text/x-rst | |
| Created: 28-Aug-2014 | |
| Resolution: https://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-dev/2014-October/136676.html | |
| Abstract | |
| ======== | |
| Currently when a standard library http client (the ``urllib``, ``urllib2``, | |
| ``http``, and ``httplib`` modules) encounters an ``https://`` URL it will wrap | |
| the network HTTP traffic in a TLS stream, as is necessary to communicate with | |
| such a server. However, during the TLS handshake it will not actually check | |
| that the server has an X509 certificate is signed by a CA in any trust root, | |
| nor will it verify that the Common Name (or Subject Alternate Name) on the | |
| presented certificate matches the requested host. | |
| The failure to do these checks means that anyone with a privileged network | |
| position is able to trivially execute a man in the middle attack against a | |
| Python application using either of these HTTP clients, and change traffic at | |
| will. | |
| This PEP proposes to enable verification of X509 certificate signatures, as | |
| well as hostname verification for Python's HTTP clients by default, subject to | |
| opt-out on a per-call basis. This change would be applied to Python 2.7, Python | |
| 3.4, and Python 3.5. | |
| Rationale | |
| ========= | |
| The "S" in "HTTPS" stands for secure. When Python's users type "HTTPS" they are | |
| expecting a secure connection, and Python should adhere to a reasonable | |
| standard of care in delivering this. Currently we are failing at this, and in | |
| doing so, APIs which appear simple are misleading users. | |
| When asked, many Python users state that they were not aware that Python failed | |
| to perform these validations, and are shocked. | |
| The popularity of ``requests`` (which enables these checks by default) | |
| demonstrates that these checks are not overly burdensome in any way, and the | |
| fact that it is widely recommended as a major security improvement over the | |
| standard library clients demonstrates that many expect a higher standard for | |
| "security by default" from their tools. | |
| The failure of various applications to note Python's negligence in this matter | |
| is a source of *regular* CVE assignment [#]_ [#]_ [#]_ [#]_ [#]_ [#]_ [#]_ [#]_ | |
| [#]_ [#]_ [#]_. | |
| .. [#] https://cve.mitre.org/cgi-bin/cvename.cgi?name=CVE-2010-4340 | |
| .. [#] https://cve.mitre.org/cgi-bin/cvename.cgi?name=CVE-2012-3533 | |
| .. [#] https://cve.mitre.org/cgi-bin/cvename.cgi?name=CVE-2012-5822 | |
| .. [#] https://cve.mitre.org/cgi-bin/cvename.cgi?name=CVE-2012-5825 | |
| .. [#] https://cve.mitre.org/cgi-bin/cvename.cgi?name=CVE-2013-1909 | |
| .. [#] https://cve.mitre.org/cgi-bin/cvename.cgi?name=CVE-2013-2037 | |
| .. [#] https://cve.mitre.org/cgi-bin/cvename.cgi?name=CVE-2013-2073 | |
| .. [#] https://cve.mitre.org/cgi-bin/cvename.cgi?name=CVE-2013-2191 | |
| .. [#] https://cve.mitre.org/cgi-bin/cvename.cgi?name=CVE-2013-4111 | |
| .. [#] https://cve.mitre.org/cgi-bin/cvename.cgi?name=CVE-2013-6396 | |
| .. [#] https://cve.mitre.org/cgi-bin/cvename.cgi?name=CVE-2013-6444 | |
| Technical Details | |
| ================= | |
| Python would use the system provided certificate database on all platforms. | |
| Failure to locate such a database would be an error, and users would need to | |
| explicitly specify a location to fix it. | |
| This will be achieved by adding a new ``ssl._create_default_https_context`` | |
| function, which is the same as ``ssl.create_default_context``. | |
| ``http.client`` can then replace its usage of ``ssl._create_stdlib_context`` | |
| with the ``ssl._create_default_https_context``. | |
| Additionally ``ssl._create_stdlib_context`` is renamed | |
| ``ssl._create_unverified_context`` (an alias is kept around for backwards | |
| compatibility reasons). | |
| Trust database | |
| -------------- | |
| This PEP proposes using the system-provided certificate database. Previous | |
| discussions have suggested bundling Mozilla's certificate database and using | |
| that by default. This was decided against for several reasons: | |
| * Using the platform trust database imposes a lower maintenance burden on the | |
| Python developers -- shipping our own trust database would require doing a | |
| release every time a certificate was revoked. | |
| * Linux vendors, and other downstreams, would unbundle the Mozilla | |
| certificates, resulting in a more fragmented set of behaviors. | |
| * Using the platform stores makes it easier to handle situations such as | |
| corporate internal CAs. | |
| OpenSSL also has a pair of environment variables, ``SSL_CERT_DIR`` and | |
| ``SSL_CERT_FILE`` which can be used to point Python at a different certificate | |
| database. | |
| Backwards compatibility | |
| ----------------------- | |
| This change will have the appearance of causing some HTTPS connections to | |
| "break", because they will now raise an Exception during handshake. | |
| This is misleading however, in fact these connections are presently failing | |
| silently, an HTTPS URL indicates an expectation of confidentiality and | |
| authentication. The fact that Python does not actually verify that the user's | |
| request has been made is a bug, further: "Errors should never pass silently." | |
| Nevertheless, users who have a need to access servers with self-signed or | |
| incorrect certificates would be able to do so by providing a context with | |
| custom trust roots or which disables validation (documentation should strongly | |
| recommend the former where possible). Users will also be able to add necessary | |
| certificates to system trust stores in order to trust them globally. | |
| Twisted's 14.0 release made this same change, and it has been met with almost | |
| no opposition. | |
| Opting out | |
| ---------- | |
| For users who wish to opt out of certificate verification on a single | |
| connection, they can achieve this by providing the ``context`` argument to | |
| ``urllib.urlopen``:: | |
| import ssl | |
| # This restores the same behavior as before. | |
| context = ssl._create_unverified_context() | |
| urllib.urlopen("https://no-valid-cert", context=context) | |
| It is also possible, **though highly discouraged**, to globally disable | |
| verification by monkeypatching the ``ssl`` module in versions of Python that | |
| implement this PEP:: | |
| import ssl | |
| try: | |
| _create_unverified_https_context = ssl._create_unverified_context | |
| except AttributeError: | |
| # Legacy Python that doesn't verify HTTPS certificates by default | |
| pass | |
| else: | |
| # Handle target environment that doesn't support HTTPS verification | |
| ssl._create_default_https_context = _create_unverified_https_context | |
| This guidance is aimed primarily at system administrators that wish to adopt | |
| newer versions of Python that implement this PEP in legacy environments that | |
| do not yet support certificate verification on HTTPS connections. For | |
| example, an administrator may opt out by adding the monkeypatch above to | |
| ``sitecustomize.py`` in their Standard Operating Environment for Python. | |
| Applications and libraries SHOULD NOT be making this change process wide | |
| (except perhaps in response to a system administrator controlled configuration | |
| setting). | |
| Particularly security sensitive applications should always provide an explicit | |
| application defined SSL context rather than relying on the default behaviour | |
| of the underlying Python implementation. | |
| Other protocols | |
| =============== | |
| This PEP only proposes requiring this level of validation for HTTP clients, not | |
| for other protocols such as SMTP. | |
| This is because while a high percentage of HTTPS servers have correct | |
| certificates, as a result of the validation performed by browsers, for other | |
| protocols self-signed or otherwise incorrect certificates are far more common. | |
| Note that for SMTP at least, this appears to be changing and should be reviewed | |
| for a potential similar PEP in the future: | |
| * https://www.facebook.com/notes/protect-the-graph/the-current-state-of-smtp-starttls-deployment/1453015901605223 | |
| * https://www.facebook.com/notes/protect-the-graph/massive-growth-in-smtp-starttls-deployment/1491049534468526 | |
| Python Versions | |
| =============== | |
| This PEP describes changes that will occur on both the 3.4.x, 3.5 and 2.7.X | |
| branches. For 2.7.X this will require backporting the ``context`` | |
| (``SSLContext``) argument to ``httplib``, in addition to the features already | |
| backported in :pep:`466`. | |
| Implementation | |
| ============== | |
| * **LANDED**: `Issue 22366 <http://bugs.python.org/issue22366>`_ adds the | |
| ``context`` argument to ``urlib.request.urlopen``. | |
| * `Issue 22417 <http://bugs.python.org/issue22417>`_ implements the substance | |
| of this PEP. | |
| Copyright | |
| ========= | |
| This document has been placed into the public domain. | |
| .. | |
| Local Variables: | |
| mode: indented-text | |
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| fill-column: 70 | |
| coding: utf-8 |