""" SecureXMLRPCServer module using pyOpenSSL 0.5 Written 0907.2002 by Michal Wallace http://www.sabren.net/ This acts exactly like SimpleXMLRPCServer from the standard python library, but uses secure connections. The technique and classes should work for any SocketServer style server. However, the code has not been extensively tested. This code is in the public domain. It is provided AS-IS WITH NO WARRANTY WHATSOEVER. """ import SocketServer import os, socket import SimpleXMLRPCServer from OpenSSL import SSL class SSLWrapper: """ This whole class exists just to filter out a parameter passed in to the shutdown() method in SimpleXMLRPC.doPOST() """ def __init__(self, conn): """ Connection is not yet a new-style class, so I'm making a proxy instead of subclassing. """ self.__dict__["conn"] = conn def __getattr__(self,name): return getattr(self.__dict__["conn"], name) def __setattr__(self,name, value): setattr(self.__dict__["conn"], name, value) def shutdown(self, how=1): """ SimpleXMLRpcServer.doPOST calls shutdown(1), and Connection.shutdown() doesn't take an argument. So we just discard the argument. """ self.__dict__["conn"].shutdown() def accept(self): """ This is the other part of the shutdown() workaround. Since servers create new sockets, we have to infect them with our magic. :) """ c, a = self.__dict__["conn"].accept() return (SSLWrapper(c), a) class SecureTCPServer(SocketServer.TCPServer): """ Just like TCPServer, but use a socket. This really ought to let you specify the key and certificate files. """ def __init__(self, server_address, RequestHandlerClass): SocketServer.BaseServer.__init__(self, server_address, RequestHandlerClass) ## Same as normal, but make it secure: ctx = SSL.Context(SSL.SSLv23_METHOD) ctx.set_options(SSL.OP_NO_SSLv2) dir = os.curdir ctx.use_privatekey_file (os.path.join(dir, 'server.pkey')) ctx.use_certificate_file(os.path.join(dir, 'server.cert')) self.socket = SSLWrapper(SSL.Connection(ctx, socket.socket(self.address_family, self.socket_type))) self.server_bind() self.server_activate() class SecureXMLRPCRequestHandler(SimpleXMLRPCServer.SimpleXMLRPCRequestHandler): def setup(self): """ We need to use socket._fileobject Because SSL.Connection doesn't have a 'dup'. Not exactly sure WHY this is, but this is backed up by comments in socket.py and SSL/connection.c """ self.connection = self.request # for doPOST self.rfile = socket._fileobject(self.request, "rb", self.rbufsize) self.wfile = socket._fileobject(self.request, "wb", self.wbufsize) class SecureXMLRPCServer(SimpleXMLRPCServer.SimpleXMLRPCServer, SecureTCPServer): def __init__(self, addr, requestHandler=SecureXMLRPCRequestHandler, logRequests=1): """ This is the exact same code as SimpleXMLRPCServer.__init__ except it calls SecureTCPServer.__init__ instead of plain old TCPServer.__init__ """ self.funcs = {} self.logRequests = logRequests self.instance = None SecureTCPServer.__init__(self, addr, requestHandler)