Top |
GStrv | advertised-protocols | Read / Write |
GIOStream * | base-io-stream | Read / Write / Construct Only |
GTlsCertificate * | certificate | Read / Write |
char * | ciphersuite-name | Read |
GTlsDatabase * | database | Read / Write |
GTlsInteraction * | interaction | Read / Write |
char * | negotiated-protocol | Read |
GTlsCertificate * | peer-certificate | Read |
GTlsCertificateFlags | peer-certificate-errors | Read |
GTlsProtocolVersion | protocol-version | Read |
GTlsRehandshakeMode | rehandshake-mode | Read / Write / Construct |
gboolean | require-close-notify | Read / Write / Construct |
gboolean | use-system-certdb | Read / Write / Construct |
GEnum ├── GTlsChannelBindingType ╰── GTlsRehandshakeMode GObject ╰── GIOStream ╰── GTlsConnection
GTlsConnection is required by GTlsClientConnection and GTlsServerConnection.
GTlsConnection is the base TLS connection class type, which wraps a GIOStream and provides TLS encryption on top of it. Its subclasses, GTlsClientConnection and GTlsServerConnection, implement client-side and server-side TLS, respectively.
For DTLS (Datagram TLS) support, see GDtlsConnection.
void g_tls_connection_set_certificate (GTlsConnection *conn
,GTlsCertificate *certificate
);
This sets the certificate that conn
will present to its peer
during the TLS handshake. For a GTlsServerConnection, it is
mandatory to set this, and that will normally be done at construct
time.
For a GTlsClientConnection, this is optional. If a handshake fails
with G_TLS_ERROR_CERTIFICATE_REQUIRED
, that means that the server
requires a certificate, and if you try connecting again, you should
call this method first. You can call
g_tls_client_connection_get_accepted_cas()
on the failed connection
to get a list of Certificate Authorities that the server will
accept certificates from.
(It is also possible that a server will allow the connection with
or without a certificate; in that case, if you don't provide a
certificate, you can tell that the server requested one by the fact
that g_tls_client_connection_get_accepted_cas()
will return
non-NULL
.)
Since: 2.28
GTlsCertificate *
g_tls_connection_get_certificate (GTlsConnection *conn
);
Gets conn
's certificate, as set by
g_tls_connection_set_certificate()
.
Since: 2.28
GTlsCertificate *
g_tls_connection_get_peer_certificate (GTlsConnection *conn
);
Gets conn
's peer's certificate after the handshake has completed
or failed. (It is not set during the emission of
“accept-certificate”.)
Since: 2.28
GTlsCertificateFlags
g_tls_connection_get_peer_certificate_errors
(GTlsConnection *conn
);
Gets the errors associated with validating conn
's peer's
certificate, after the handshake has completed or failed. (It is
not set during the emission of “accept-certificate”.)
Since: 2.28
gboolean g_tls_connection_get_channel_binding_data (GTlsConnection *conn
,GTlsChannelBindingType type
,GByteArray *data
,GError **error
);
Query the TLS backend for TLS channel binding data of type
for conn
.
This call retrieves TLS channel binding data as specified in RFC
5056, RFC
5929, and related RFCs. The
binding data is returned in data
. The data
is resized by the callee
using GByteArray buffer management and will be freed when the data
is destroyed by g_byte_array_unref()
. If data
is NULL
, it will only
check whether TLS backend is able to fetch the data (e.g. whether type
is supported by the TLS backend). It does not guarantee that the data
will be available though. That could happen if TLS connection does not
support type
or the binding data is not available yet due to additional
negotiation or input required.
conn |
||
type |
GTlsChannelBindingType type of data to fetch |
|
data |
GByteArray is
filled with the binding data, or |
[out callee-allocates][optional][transfer none] |
error |
a GError pointer, or |
Since: 2.66
void g_tls_connection_set_require_close_notify (GTlsConnection *conn
,gboolean require_close_notify
);
Sets whether or not conn
expects a proper TLS close notification
before the connection is closed. If this is TRUE
(the default),
then conn
will expect to receive a TLS close notification from its
peer before the connection is closed, and will return a
G_TLS_ERROR_EOF
error if the connection is closed without proper
notification (since this may indicate a network error, or
man-in-the-middle attack).
In some protocols, the application will know whether or not the
connection was closed cleanly based on application-level data
(because the application-level data includes a length field, or is
somehow self-delimiting); in this case, the close notify is
redundant and sometimes omitted. (TLS 1.1 explicitly allows this;
in TLS 1.0 it is technically an error, but often done anyway.) You
can use g_tls_connection_set_require_close_notify()
to tell conn
to allow an "unannounced" connection close, in which case the close
will show up as a 0-length read, as in a non-TLS
GSocketConnection, and it is up to the application to check that
the data has been fully received.
Note that this only affects the behavior when the peer closes the
connection; when the application calls g_io_stream_close()
itself
on conn
, this will send a close notification regardless of the
setting of this property. If you explicitly want to do an unclean
close, you can close conn
's “base-io-stream” rather
than closing conn
itself, but note that this may only be done when no other
operations are pending on conn
or the base I/O stream.
Since: 2.28
gboolean
g_tls_connection_get_require_close_notify
(GTlsConnection *conn
);
Tests whether or not conn
expects a proper TLS close notification
when the connection is closed. See
g_tls_connection_set_require_close_notify()
for details.
Since: 2.28
void g_tls_connection_set_rehandshake_mode (GTlsConnection *conn
,GTlsRehandshakeMode mode
);
g_tls_connection_set_rehandshake_mode
has been deprecated since version 2.60. and should not be used in newly-written code.
Changing the rehandshake mode is no longer required for compatibility. Also, rehandshaking has been removed from the TLS protocol in TLS 1.3.
Since GLib 2.64, changing the rehandshake mode is no longer supported and will have no effect. With TLS 1.3, rehandshaking has been removed from the TLS protocol, replaced by separate post-handshake authentication and rekey operations.
Since: 2.28
GTlsRehandshakeMode
g_tls_connection_get_rehandshake_mode (GTlsConnection *conn
);
g_tls_connection_get_rehandshake_mode
has been deprecated since version 2.60. and should not be used in newly-written code.
Changing the rehandshake mode is no longer required for compatibility. Also, rehandshaking has been removed from the TLS protocol in TLS 1.3.
Gets conn
rehandshaking mode. See
g_tls_connection_set_rehandshake_mode()
for details.
Since: 2.28
void g_tls_connection_set_advertised_protocols (GTlsConnection *conn
,const gchar * const *protocols
);
Sets the list of application-layer protocols to advertise that the
caller is willing to speak on this connection. The
Application-Layer Protocol Negotiation (ALPN) extension will be
used to negotiate a compatible protocol with the peer; use
g_tls_connection_get_negotiated_protocol()
to find the negotiated
protocol after the handshake. Specifying NULL
for the the value
of protocols
will disable ALPN negotiation.
See IANA TLS ALPN Protocol IDs for a list of registered protocol IDs.
conn |
||
protocols |
a |
[array zero-terminated=1][nullable] |
Since: 2.60
const gchar *
g_tls_connection_get_negotiated_protocol
(GTlsConnection *conn
);
Gets the name of the application-layer protocol negotiated during the handshake.
If the peer did not use the ALPN extension, or did not advertise a
protocol that matched one of conn
's protocols, or the TLS backend
does not support ALPN, then this will be NULL
. See
g_tls_connection_set_advertised_protocols()
.
Since: 2.60
void g_tls_connection_set_use_system_certdb (GTlsConnection *conn
,gboolean use_system_certdb
);
g_tls_connection_set_use_system_certdb
has been deprecated since version 2.30 and should not be used in newly-written code.
Use g_tls_connection_set_database()
instead
Sets whether conn
uses the system certificate database to verify
peer certificates. This is TRUE
by default. If set to FALSE
, then
peer certificate validation will always set the
G_TLS_CERTIFICATE_UNKNOWN_CA
error (meaning
“accept-certificate” will always be emitted on
client-side connections, unless that bit is not set in
“validation-flags”).
gboolean
g_tls_connection_get_use_system_certdb
(GTlsConnection *conn
);
g_tls_connection_get_use_system_certdb
has been deprecated since version 2.30 and should not be used in newly-written code.
Use g_tls_connection_get_database()
instead
Gets whether conn
uses the system certificate database to verify
peer certificates. See g_tls_connection_set_use_system_certdb()
.
GTlsDatabase *
g_tls_connection_get_database (GTlsConnection *conn
);
Gets the certificate database that conn
uses to verify
peer certificates. See g_tls_connection_set_database()
.
Since: 2.30
void g_tls_connection_set_database (GTlsConnection *conn
,GTlsDatabase *database
);
Sets the certificate database that is used to verify peer certificates.
This is set to the default database by default. See
g_tls_backend_get_default_database()
. If set to NULL
, then
peer certificate validation will always set the
G_TLS_CERTIFICATE_UNKNOWN_CA
error (meaning
“accept-certificate” will always be emitted on
client-side connections, unless that bit is not set in
“validation-flags”).
Since: 2.30
GTlsInteraction *
g_tls_connection_get_interaction (GTlsConnection *conn
);
Get the object that will be used to interact with the user. It will be used
for things like prompting the user for passwords. If NULL
is returned, then
no user interaction will occur for this connection.
Since: 2.30
void g_tls_connection_set_interaction (GTlsConnection *conn
,GTlsInteraction *interaction
);
Set the object that will be used to interact with the user. It will be used for things like prompting the user for passwords.
The interaction
argument will normally be a derived subclass of
GTlsInteraction. NULL
can also be provided if no user interaction
should occur for this connection.
Since: 2.30
GTlsProtocolVersion
g_tls_connection_get_protocol_version (GTlsConnection *conn
);
Returns the current TLS protocol version, which may be
G_TLS_PROTOCOL_VERSION_UNKNOWN
if the connection has not handshaked, or
has been closed, or if the TLS backend has implemented a protocol version
that is not a recognized GTlsProtocolVersion.
Since: 2.70
gchar *
g_tls_connection_get_ciphersuite_name (GTlsConnection *conn
);
Returns the name of the current TLS ciphersuite, or NULL
if the
connection has not handshaked or has been closed. Beware that the TLS
backend may use any of multiple different naming conventions, because
OpenSSL and GnuTLS have their own ciphersuite naming conventions that
are different from each other and different from the standard, IANA-
registered ciphersuite names. The ciphersuite name is intended to be
displayed to the user for informative purposes only, and parsing it
is not recommended.
Since: 2.70
gboolean g_tls_connection_handshake (GTlsConnection *conn
,GCancellable *cancellable
,GError **error
);
Attempts a TLS handshake on conn
.
On the client side, it is never necessary to call this method;
although the connection needs to perform a handshake after
connecting (or after sending a "STARTTLS"-type command),
GTlsConnection will handle this for you automatically when you try
to send or receive data on the connection. You can call
g_tls_connection_handshake()
manually if you want to know whether
the initial handshake succeeded or failed (as opposed to just
immediately trying to use conn
to read or write, in which case,
if it fails, it may not be possible to tell if it failed before or
after completing the handshake), but beware that servers may reject
client authentication after the handshake has completed, so a
successful handshake does not indicate the connection will be usable.
Likewise, on the server side, although a handshake is necessary at the beginning of the communication, you do not need to call this function explicitly unless you want clearer error reporting.
Previously, calling g_tls_connection_handshake()
after the initial
handshake would trigger a rehandshake; however, this usage was
deprecated in GLib 2.60 because rehandshaking was removed from the
TLS protocol in TLS 1.3. Since GLib 2.64, calling this function after
the initial handshake will no longer do anything.
When using a GTlsConnection created by GSocketClient, the GSocketClient performs the initial handshake, so calling this function manually is not recommended.
“accept_certificate” may be emitted during the handshake.
Since: 2.28
void g_tls_connection_handshake_async (GTlsConnection *conn
,int io_priority
,GCancellable *cancellable
,GAsyncReadyCallback callback
,gpointer user_data
);
Asynchronously performs a TLS handshake on conn
. See
g_tls_connection_handshake()
for more information.
conn |
||
io_priority |
the I/O priority of the request |
|
cancellable |
a GCancellable, or |
[nullable] |
callback |
callback to call when the handshake is complete |
|
user_data |
the data to pass to the callback function |
Since: 2.28
gboolean g_tls_connection_handshake_finish (GTlsConnection *conn
,GAsyncResult *result
,GError **error
);
Finish an asynchronous TLS handshake operation. See
g_tls_connection_handshake()
for more information.
Since: 2.28
gboolean g_tls_connection_emit_accept_certificate (GTlsConnection *conn
,GTlsCertificate *peer_cert
,GTlsCertificateFlags errors
);
Used by GTlsConnection implementations to emit the “accept-certificate” signal.
Since: 2.28
typedef struct _GTlsConnection GTlsConnection;
Abstract base class for the backend-specific GTlsClientConnection and GTlsServerConnection types.
Since: 2.28
The type of TLS channel binding data to retrieve from GTlsConnection
or GDtlsConnection, as documented by RFC 5929. The
tls-unique-for-telnet
binding type is not currently implemented.
Since: 2.66
GTlsRehandshakeMode
has been deprecated since version 2.60. and should not be used in newly-written code.
Changing the rehandshake mode is no longer required for compatibility. Also, rehandshaking has been removed from the TLS protocol in TLS 1.3.
When to allow rehandshaking. See
g_tls_connection_set_rehandshake_mode()
.
Since: 2.28
“advertised-protocols”
property “advertised-protocols” GStrv
The list of application-layer protocols that the connection
advertises that it is willing to speak. See
g_tls_connection_set_advertised_protocols()
.
[nullable]
Owner: GTlsConnection
Flags: Read / Write
Since: 2.60
“base-io-stream”
property“base-io-stream” GIOStream *
The GIOStream that the connection wraps. The connection holds a reference to this stream, and may run operations on the stream from other threads throughout its lifetime. Consequently, after the GIOStream has been constructed, application code may only run its own operations on this stream when no GIOStream operations are running.
Owner: GTlsConnection
Flags: Read / Write / Construct Only
Since: 2.28
“certificate”
property“certificate” GTlsCertificate *
The connection's certificate; see
g_tls_connection_set_certificate()
.
Owner: GTlsConnection
Flags: Read / Write
Since: 2.28
“ciphersuite-name”
property “ciphersuite-name” char *
The name of the TLS ciphersuite in use. See g_tls_connection_get_ciphersuite_name()
.
[nullable]
Owner: GTlsConnection
Flags: Read
Default value: NULL
Since: 2.70
“database”
property“database” GTlsDatabase *
The certificate database to use when verifying this TLS connection.
If no certificate database is set, then the default database will be
used. See g_tls_backend_get_default_database()
.
[nullable]
Owner: GTlsConnection
Flags: Read / Write
Since: 2.30
“interaction”
property“interaction” GTlsInteraction *
A GTlsInteraction object to be used when the connection or certificate database need to interact with the user. This will be used to prompt the user for passwords where necessary.
[nullable]
Owner: GTlsConnection
Flags: Read / Write
Since: 2.30
“negotiated-protocol”
property “negotiated-protocol” char *
The application-layer protocol negotiated during the TLS
handshake. See g_tls_connection_get_negotiated_protocol()
.
Owner: GTlsConnection
Flags: Read
Default value: NULL
Since: 2.60
“peer-certificate”
property“peer-certificate” GTlsCertificate *
The connection's peer's certificate, after the TLS handshake has completed or failed. Note in particular that this is not yet set during the emission of “accept-certificate”.
(You can watch for a “notify” signal on this property to detect when a handshake has occurred.)
[nullable]
Owner: GTlsConnection
Flags: Read
Since: 2.28
“peer-certificate-errors”
property“peer-certificate-errors” GTlsCertificateFlags
The errors noticed while verifying
“peer-certificate”. Normally this should be 0, but
it may not be if “validation-flags” is not
G_TLS_CERTIFICATE_VALIDATE_ALL
, or if
“accept-certificate” overrode the default
behavior.
Owner: GTlsConnection
Flags: Read
Since: 2.28
“protocol-version”
property“protocol-version” GTlsProtocolVersion
The TLS protocol version in use. See g_tls_connection_get_protocol_version()
.
Owner: GTlsConnection
Flags: Read
Default value: G_TLS_PROTOCOL_VERSION_UNKNOWN
Since: 2.70
“rehandshake-mode”
property“rehandshake-mode” GTlsRehandshakeMode
The rehandshaking mode. See
g_tls_connection_set_rehandshake_mode()
.
GTlsConnection:rehandshake-mode
has been deprecated since version 2.60 and should not be used in newly-written code.
The rehandshake mode is ignored.
Owner: GTlsConnection
Flags: Read / Write / Construct
Default value: G_TLS_REHANDSHAKE_SAFELY
Since: 2.28
“require-close-notify”
property “require-close-notify” gboolean
Whether or not proper TLS close notification is required.
See g_tls_connection_set_require_close_notify()
.
Owner: GTlsConnection
Flags: Read / Write / Construct
Default value: TRUE
Since: 2.28
“use-system-certdb”
property “use-system-certdb” gboolean
Whether or not the system certificate database will be used to
verify peer certificates. See
g_tls_connection_set_use_system_certdb()
.
GTlsConnection:use-system-certdb
has been deprecated since version 2.30 and should not be used in newly-written code.
Use GTlsConnection:database instead
Owner: GTlsConnection
Flags: Read / Write / Construct
Default value: TRUE
“accept-certificate”
signalgboolean user_function (GTlsConnection *conn, GTlsCertificate *peer_cert, GTlsCertificateFlags errors, gpointer user_data)
Emitted during the TLS handshake after the peer certificate has
been received. You can examine peer_cert
's certification path by
calling g_tls_certificate_get_issuer()
on it.
For a client-side connection, peer_cert
is the server's
certificate, and the signal will only be emitted if the
certificate was not acceptable according to conn
's
“validation_flags”. If you would like the
certificate to be accepted despite errors
, return TRUE
from the
signal handler. Otherwise, if no handler accepts the certificate,
the handshake will fail with G_TLS_ERROR_BAD_CERTIFICATE
.
For a server-side connection, peer_cert
is the certificate
presented by the client, if this was requested via the server's
“authentication_mode”. On the server side,
the signal is always emitted when the client presents a
certificate, and the certificate will only be accepted if a
handler returns TRUE
.
Note that if this signal is emitted as part of asynchronous I/O
in the main thread, then you should not attempt to interact with
the user before returning from the signal handler. If you want to
let the user decide whether or not to accept the certificate, you
would have to return FALSE
from the signal handler on the first
attempt, and then after the connection attempt returns a
G_TLS_ERROR_BAD_CERTIFICATE
, you can interact with the user, and
if the user decides to accept the certificate, remember that fact,
create a new connection, and return TRUE
from the signal handler
the next time.
If you are doing I/O in another thread, you do not need to worry about this, and can simply block in the signal handler until the UI thread returns an answer.
conn |
||
peer_cert |
the peer's GTlsCertificate |
|
errors |
the problems with |
|
user_data |
user data set when the signal handler was connected. |
TRUE
to accept peer_cert
(which will also
immediately end the signal emission). FALSE
to allow the signal
emission to continue, which will cause the handshake to fail if
no one else overrides it.
Flags: Run Last
Since: 2.28