Gio.TlsDatabase¶
class — extends GObject.Object
GTlsDatabase is used to look up certificates and other information
from a certificate or key store. It is an abstract base class which
TLS library specific subtypes override.
A GTlsDatabase may be accessed from multiple threads by the TLS backend.
All implementations are required to be fully thread-safe.
Most common client applications will not directly interact with
GTlsDatabase. It is used internally by TlsConnection.
Methods¶
create_certificate_handle¶
Create a handle string for the certificate. The database will only be able
to create a handle for certificates that originate from the database. In
cases where the database cannot create a handle for a certificate, None
will be returned.
This handle should be stable across various instances of the application, and between applications. If a certificate is modified in the database, then it is not guaranteed that this handle will continue to point to it.
Parameters:
certificate— certificate for which to create a handle.
lookup_certificate_for_handle¶
def lookup_certificate_for_handle(self, handle: str, interaction: TlsInteraction | None, flags: TlsDatabaseLookupFlags | int, cancellable: Cancellable | None = ...) -> TlsCertificate | None
Look up a certificate by its handle.
The handle should have been created by calling
TlsDatabase.create_certificate_handle on a TlsDatabase object of
the same TLS backend. The handle is designed to remain valid across
instantiations of the database.
If the handle is no longer valid, or does not point to a certificate in
this database, then None will be returned.
This function can block, use TlsDatabase.lookup_certificate_for_handle_async to perform
the lookup operation asynchronously.
Parameters:
handle— a certificate handleinteraction— used to interact with the user if necessaryflags— Flags which affect the lookup.cancellable— aCancellable, orNone
lookup_certificate_for_handle_async¶
def lookup_certificate_for_handle_async(self, handle: str, interaction: TlsInteraction | None, flags: TlsDatabaseLookupFlags | int, cancellable: Cancellable | None = ..., callback: Callable[[TlsDatabase | None, AsyncResult], None] | None = ...) -> None
Asynchronously look up a certificate by its handle in the database. See
TlsDatabase.lookup_certificate_for_handle for more information.
Parameters:
handle— a certificate handleinteraction— used to interact with the user if necessaryflags— Flags which affect the lookup.cancellable— aCancellable, orNonecallback— callback to call when the operation completes
lookup_certificate_for_handle_finish¶
Finish an asynchronous lookup of a certificate by its handle. See
TlsDatabase.lookup_certificate_for_handle for more information.
If the handle is no longer valid, or does not point to a certificate in
this database, then None will be returned.
Parameters:
result— aAsyncResult.
lookup_certificate_issuer¶
def lookup_certificate_issuer(self, certificate: TlsCertificate, interaction: TlsInteraction | None, flags: TlsDatabaseLookupFlags | int, cancellable: Cancellable | None = ...) -> TlsCertificate
Look up the issuer of certificate in the database. The
TlsCertificate:issuer property of certificate is not modified, and
the two certificates are not hooked into a chain.
This function can block. Use TlsDatabase.lookup_certificate_issuer_async
to perform the lookup operation asynchronously.
Beware this function cannot be used to build certification paths. The issuer certificate returned by this function may not be the same as the certificate that would actually be used to construct a valid certification path during certificate verification. RFC 4158 explains why an issuer certificate cannot be naively assumed to be part of the the certification path (though GLib's TLS backends may not follow the path building strategies outlined in this RFC). Due to the complexity of certification path building, GLib does not provide any way to know which certification path will actually be used when verifying a TLS certificate. Accordingly, this function cannot be used to make security-related decisions. Only GLib itself should make security decisions about TLS certificates.
Parameters:
certificate— aTlsCertificateinteraction— used to interact with the user if necessaryflags— flags which affect the lookup operationcancellable— aCancellable, orNone
lookup_certificate_issuer_async¶
def lookup_certificate_issuer_async(self, certificate: TlsCertificate, interaction: TlsInteraction | None, flags: TlsDatabaseLookupFlags | int, cancellable: Cancellable | None = ..., callback: Callable[[TlsDatabase | None, AsyncResult], None] | None = ...) -> None
Asynchronously look up the issuer of certificate in the database. See
TlsDatabase.lookup_certificate_issuer for more information.
Parameters:
certificate— aTlsCertificateinteraction— used to interact with the user if necessaryflags— flags which affect the lookup operationcancellable— aCancellable, orNonecallback— callback to call when the operation completes
lookup_certificate_issuer_finish¶
Finish an asynchronous lookup issuer operation. See
TlsDatabase.lookup_certificate_issuer for more information.
Parameters:
result— aAsyncResult.
lookup_certificates_issued_by¶
def lookup_certificates_issued_by(self, issuer_raw_dn: list[int], interaction: TlsInteraction | None, flags: TlsDatabaseLookupFlags | int, cancellable: Cancellable | None = ...) -> list[TlsCertificate]
Look up certificates issued by this issuer in the database.
This function can block, use TlsDatabase.lookup_certificates_issued_by_async to perform
the lookup operation asynchronously.
Parameters:
issuer_raw_dn— aGLib.ByteArraywhich holds the DER encoded issuer DN.interaction— used to interact with the user if necessaryflags— Flags which affect the lookup operation.cancellable— aCancellable, orNone
lookup_certificates_issued_by_async¶
def lookup_certificates_issued_by_async(self, issuer_raw_dn: list[int], interaction: TlsInteraction | None, flags: TlsDatabaseLookupFlags | int, cancellable: Cancellable | None = ..., callback: Callable[[TlsDatabase | None, AsyncResult], None] | None = ...) -> None
Asynchronously look up certificates issued by this issuer in the database. See
TlsDatabase.lookup_certificates_issued_by for more information.
The database may choose to hold a reference to the issuer byte array for the duration of this asynchronous operation. The byte array should not be modified during this time.
Parameters:
issuer_raw_dn— aGLib.ByteArraywhich holds the DER encoded issuer DN.interaction— used to interact with the user if necessaryflags— Flags which affect the lookup operation.cancellable— aCancellable, orNonecallback— callback to call when the operation completes
lookup_certificates_issued_by_finish¶
Finish an asynchronous lookup of certificates. See
TlsDatabase.lookup_certificates_issued_by for more information.
Parameters:
result— aAsyncResult.
verify_chain¶
def verify_chain(self, chain: TlsCertificate, purpose: str, identity: SocketConnectable | None, interaction: TlsInteraction | None, flags: TlsDatabaseVerifyFlags | int, cancellable: Cancellable | None = ...) -> TlsCertificateFlags
Determines the validity of a certificate chain, outside the context of a TLS session.
chain is a chain of TlsCertificate objects each pointing to the next
certificate in the chain by its TlsCertificate:issuer property.
purpose describes the purpose (or usage) for which the certificate
is being used. Typically purpose will be set to TLS_DATABASE_PURPOSE_AUTHENTICATE_SERVER
which means that the certificate is being used to authenticate a server
(and we are acting as the client).
The identity is used to ensure the server certificate is valid for
the expected peer identity. If the identity does not match the
certificate, TlsCertificateFlags.BAD_IDENTITY will be set in the
return value. If identity is None, that bit will never be set in
the return value. The peer identity may also be used to check for
pinned certificates (trust exceptions) in the database. These may
override the normal verification process on a host-by-host basis.
Currently there are no flags, and TlsDatabaseVerifyFlags.NONE should be
used.
If chain is found to be valid, then the return value will be 0. If
chain is found to be invalid, then the return value will indicate at
least one problem found. If the function is unable to determine
whether chain is valid (for example, because cancellable is
triggered before it completes) then the return value will be
TlsCertificateFlags.GENERIC_ERROR and error will be set accordingly.
error is not set when chain is successfully analyzed but found to
be invalid.
GLib guarantees that if certificate verification fails, at least one
error will be set in the return value, but it does not guarantee
that all possible errors will be set. Accordingly, you may not safely
decide to ignore any particular type of error. For example, it would
be incorrect to mask TlsCertificateFlags.EXPIRED if you want to allow
expired certificates, because this could potentially be the only
error flag set even if other problems exist with the certificate.
Prior to GLib 2.48, GLib's default TLS backend modified chain to
represent the certification path built by TlsDatabase during
certificate verification by adjusting the TlsCertificate:issuer
property of each certificate in chain. Since GLib 2.48, this no
longer occurs, so you cannot rely on TlsCertificate:issuer to
represent the actual certification path used during certificate
verification.
Because TLS session context is not used, TlsDatabase may not
perform as many checks on the certificates as TlsConnection would.
For example, certificate constraints may not be honored, and
revocation checks may not be performed. The best way to verify TLS
certificates used by a TLS connection is to let TlsConnection
handle the verification.
The TLS backend may attempt to look up and add missing certificates to the chain. This may involve HTTP requests to download missing certificates.
This function can block. Use TlsDatabase.verify_chain_async to
perform the verification operation asynchronously.
Parameters:
chain— aTlsCertificatechainpurpose— the purpose that this certificate chain will be used for.identity— the expected peer identityinteraction— used to interact with the user if necessaryflags— additional verify flagscancellable— aCancellable, orNone
verify_chain_async¶
def verify_chain_async(self, chain: TlsCertificate, purpose: str, identity: SocketConnectable | None, interaction: TlsInteraction | None, flags: TlsDatabaseVerifyFlags | int, cancellable: Cancellable | None = ..., callback: Callable[[TlsDatabase | None, AsyncResult], None] | None = ...) -> None
Asynchronously determines the validity of a certificate chain after
looking up and adding any missing certificates to the chain. See
TlsDatabase.verify_chain for more information.
Parameters:
chain— aTlsCertificatechainpurpose— the purpose that this certificate chain will be used for.identity— the expected peer identityinteraction— used to interact with the user if necessaryflags— additional verify flagscancellable— aCancellable, orNonecallback— callback to call when the operation completes
verify_chain_finish¶
Finish an asynchronous verify chain operation. See
TlsDatabase.verify_chain for more information.
If chain is found to be valid, then the return value will be 0. If
chain is found to be invalid, then the return value will indicate
the problems found. If the function is unable to determine whether
chain is valid or not (eg, because cancellable is triggered
before it completes) then the return value will be
TlsCertificateFlags.GENERIC_ERROR and error will be set
accordingly. error is not set when chain is successfully analyzed
but found to be invalid.
Parameters:
result— aAsyncResult.
Virtual methods¶
do_create_certificate_handle¶
Create a handle string for the certificate. The database will only be able
to create a handle for certificates that originate from the database. In
cases where the database cannot create a handle for a certificate, None
will be returned.
This handle should be stable across various instances of the application, and between applications. If a certificate is modified in the database, then it is not guaranteed that this handle will continue to point to it.
Parameters:
certificate— certificate for which to create a handle.
do_lookup_certificate_for_handle¶
def do_lookup_certificate_for_handle(self, handle: str, interaction: TlsInteraction | None, flags: TlsDatabaseLookupFlags | int, cancellable: Cancellable | None = ...) -> TlsCertificate | None
Look up a certificate by its handle.
The handle should have been created by calling
TlsDatabase.create_certificate_handle on a TlsDatabase object of
the same TLS backend. The handle is designed to remain valid across
instantiations of the database.
If the handle is no longer valid, or does not point to a certificate in
this database, then None will be returned.
This function can block, use TlsDatabase.lookup_certificate_for_handle_async to perform
the lookup operation asynchronously.
Parameters:
handle— a certificate handleinteraction— used to interact with the user if necessaryflags— Flags which affect the lookup.cancellable— aCancellable, orNone
do_lookup_certificate_for_handle_async¶
def do_lookup_certificate_for_handle_async(self, handle: str, interaction: TlsInteraction | None, flags: TlsDatabaseLookupFlags | int, cancellable: Cancellable | None = ..., callback: Callable[[TlsDatabase | None, AsyncResult], None] | None = ...) -> None
Asynchronously look up a certificate by its handle in the database. See
TlsDatabase.lookup_certificate_for_handle for more information.
Parameters:
handle— a certificate handleinteraction— used to interact with the user if necessaryflags— Flags which affect the lookup.cancellable— aCancellable, orNonecallback— callback to call when the operation completes
do_lookup_certificate_for_handle_finish¶
Finish an asynchronous lookup of a certificate by its handle. See
TlsDatabase.lookup_certificate_for_handle for more information.
If the handle is no longer valid, or does not point to a certificate in
this database, then None will be returned.
Parameters:
result— aAsyncResult.
do_lookup_certificate_issuer¶
def do_lookup_certificate_issuer(self, certificate: TlsCertificate, interaction: TlsInteraction | None, flags: TlsDatabaseLookupFlags | int, cancellable: Cancellable | None = ...) -> TlsCertificate
Look up the issuer of certificate in the database. The
TlsCertificate:issuer property of certificate is not modified, and
the two certificates are not hooked into a chain.
This function can block. Use TlsDatabase.lookup_certificate_issuer_async
to perform the lookup operation asynchronously.
Beware this function cannot be used to build certification paths. The issuer certificate returned by this function may not be the same as the certificate that would actually be used to construct a valid certification path during certificate verification. RFC 4158 explains why an issuer certificate cannot be naively assumed to be part of the the certification path (though GLib's TLS backends may not follow the path building strategies outlined in this RFC). Due to the complexity of certification path building, GLib does not provide any way to know which certification path will actually be used when verifying a TLS certificate. Accordingly, this function cannot be used to make security-related decisions. Only GLib itself should make security decisions about TLS certificates.
Parameters:
certificate— aTlsCertificateinteraction— used to interact with the user if necessaryflags— flags which affect the lookup operationcancellable— aCancellable, orNone
do_lookup_certificate_issuer_async¶
def do_lookup_certificate_issuer_async(self, certificate: TlsCertificate, interaction: TlsInteraction | None, flags: TlsDatabaseLookupFlags | int, cancellable: Cancellable | None = ..., callback: Callable[[TlsDatabase | None, AsyncResult], None] | None = ...) -> None
Asynchronously look up the issuer of certificate in the database. See
TlsDatabase.lookup_certificate_issuer for more information.
Parameters:
certificate— aTlsCertificateinteraction— used to interact with the user if necessaryflags— flags which affect the lookup operationcancellable— aCancellable, orNonecallback— callback to call when the operation completes
do_lookup_certificate_issuer_finish¶
Finish an asynchronous lookup issuer operation. See
TlsDatabase.lookup_certificate_issuer for more information.
Parameters:
result— aAsyncResult.
do_lookup_certificates_issued_by¶
def do_lookup_certificates_issued_by(self, issuer_raw_dn: list[int], interaction: TlsInteraction | None, flags: TlsDatabaseLookupFlags | int, cancellable: Cancellable | None = ...) -> list[TlsCertificate]
Look up certificates issued by this issuer in the database.
This function can block, use TlsDatabase.lookup_certificates_issued_by_async to perform
the lookup operation asynchronously.
Parameters:
issuer_raw_dn— aGLib.ByteArraywhich holds the DER encoded issuer DN.interaction— used to interact with the user if necessaryflags— Flags which affect the lookup operation.cancellable— aCancellable, orNone
do_lookup_certificates_issued_by_async¶
def do_lookup_certificates_issued_by_async(self, issuer_raw_dn: list[int], interaction: TlsInteraction | None, flags: TlsDatabaseLookupFlags | int, cancellable: Cancellable | None = ..., callback: Callable[[TlsDatabase | None, AsyncResult], None] | None = ...) -> None
Asynchronously look up certificates issued by this issuer in the database. See
TlsDatabase.lookup_certificates_issued_by for more information.
The database may choose to hold a reference to the issuer byte array for the duration of this asynchronous operation. The byte array should not be modified during this time.
Parameters:
issuer_raw_dn— aGLib.ByteArraywhich holds the DER encoded issuer DN.interaction— used to interact with the user if necessaryflags— Flags which affect the lookup operation.cancellable— aCancellable, orNonecallback— callback to call when the operation completes
do_lookup_certificates_issued_by_finish¶
Finish an asynchronous lookup of certificates. See
TlsDatabase.lookup_certificates_issued_by for more information.
Parameters:
result— aAsyncResult.
do_verify_chain¶
def do_verify_chain(self, chain: TlsCertificate, purpose: str, identity: SocketConnectable | None, interaction: TlsInteraction | None, flags: TlsDatabaseVerifyFlags | int, cancellable: Cancellable | None = ...) -> TlsCertificateFlags
Determines the validity of a certificate chain, outside the context of a TLS session.
chain is a chain of TlsCertificate objects each pointing to the next
certificate in the chain by its TlsCertificate:issuer property.
purpose describes the purpose (or usage) for which the certificate
is being used. Typically purpose will be set to TLS_DATABASE_PURPOSE_AUTHENTICATE_SERVER
which means that the certificate is being used to authenticate a server
(and we are acting as the client).
The identity is used to ensure the server certificate is valid for
the expected peer identity. If the identity does not match the
certificate, TlsCertificateFlags.BAD_IDENTITY will be set in the
return value. If identity is None, that bit will never be set in
the return value. The peer identity may also be used to check for
pinned certificates (trust exceptions) in the database. These may
override the normal verification process on a host-by-host basis.
Currently there are no flags, and TlsDatabaseVerifyFlags.NONE should be
used.
If chain is found to be valid, then the return value will be 0. If
chain is found to be invalid, then the return value will indicate at
least one problem found. If the function is unable to determine
whether chain is valid (for example, because cancellable is
triggered before it completes) then the return value will be
TlsCertificateFlags.GENERIC_ERROR and error will be set accordingly.
error is not set when chain is successfully analyzed but found to
be invalid.
GLib guarantees that if certificate verification fails, at least one
error will be set in the return value, but it does not guarantee
that all possible errors will be set. Accordingly, you may not safely
decide to ignore any particular type of error. For example, it would
be incorrect to mask TlsCertificateFlags.EXPIRED if you want to allow
expired certificates, because this could potentially be the only
error flag set even if other problems exist with the certificate.
Prior to GLib 2.48, GLib's default TLS backend modified chain to
represent the certification path built by TlsDatabase during
certificate verification by adjusting the TlsCertificate:issuer
property of each certificate in chain. Since GLib 2.48, this no
longer occurs, so you cannot rely on TlsCertificate:issuer to
represent the actual certification path used during certificate
verification.
Because TLS session context is not used, TlsDatabase may not
perform as many checks on the certificates as TlsConnection would.
For example, certificate constraints may not be honored, and
revocation checks may not be performed. The best way to verify TLS
certificates used by a TLS connection is to let TlsConnection
handle the verification.
The TLS backend may attempt to look up and add missing certificates to the chain. This may involve HTTP requests to download missing certificates.
This function can block. Use TlsDatabase.verify_chain_async to
perform the verification operation asynchronously.
Parameters:
chain— aTlsCertificatechainpurpose— the purpose that this certificate chain will be used for.identity— the expected peer identityinteraction— used to interact with the user if necessaryflags— additional verify flagscancellable— aCancellable, orNone
do_verify_chain_async¶
def do_verify_chain_async(self, chain: TlsCertificate, purpose: str, identity: SocketConnectable | None, interaction: TlsInteraction | None, flags: TlsDatabaseVerifyFlags | int, cancellable: Cancellable | None = ..., callback: Callable[[TlsDatabase | None, AsyncResult], None] | None = ...) -> None
Asynchronously determines the validity of a certificate chain after
looking up and adding any missing certificates to the chain. See
TlsDatabase.verify_chain for more information.
Parameters:
chain— aTlsCertificatechainpurpose— the purpose that this certificate chain will be used for.identity— the expected peer identityinteraction— used to interact with the user if necessaryflags— additional verify flagscancellable— aCancellable, orNonecallback— callback to call when the operation completes
do_verify_chain_finish¶
Finish an asynchronous verify chain operation. See
TlsDatabase.verify_chain for more information.
If chain is found to be valid, then the return value will be 0. If
chain is found to be invalid, then the return value will indicate
the problems found. If the function is unable to determine whether
chain is valid or not (eg, because cancellable is triggered
before it completes) then the return value will be
TlsCertificateFlags.GENERIC_ERROR and error will be set
accordingly. error is not set when chain is successfully analyzed
but found to be invalid.
Parameters:
result— aAsyncResult.