micropython/tests/net_inet/asyncio_tls_open_connection...

60 lines
1.7 KiB
Python

import ssl
import os
import asyncio
# This certificate was obtained from micropython.org using openssl:
# $ openssl s_client -showcerts -connect micropython.org:443 </dev/null 2>/dev/null
# The certificate is from Let's Encrypt:
# 1 s:/C=US/O=Let's Encrypt/CN=R3
# i:/C=US/O=Internet Security Research Group/CN=ISRG Root X1
# Validity
# Not Before: Sep 4 00:00:00 2020 GMT
# Not After : Sep 15 16:00:00 2025 GMT
# Copy PEM content to a file (certmpy.pem) and convert to DER e.g.
# $ openssl x509 -in certmpy.pem -out certmpy.der -outform DER
# Then convert to hex format, eg using binascii.hexlify(data).
# Note that the instructions above is to obtain an intermediate
# root CA cert that works for MicroPython. However CPython needs the ultimate root CA
# cert from ISRG
ca_cert_chain = "isrg.der"
try:
os.stat(ca_cert_chain)
except OSError:
print("SKIP")
raise SystemExit
with open(ca_cert_chain, "rb") as ca:
cadata = ca.read()
client_ctx = ssl.SSLContext(ssl.PROTOCOL_TLS_CLIENT)
client_ctx.verify_mode = ssl.CERT_REQUIRED
client_ctx.load_verify_locations(cadata=cadata)
async def http_get(url, port, sslctx):
reader, writer = await asyncio.open_connection(url, port, ssl=sslctx)
print("write GET")
writer.write(b"GET / HTTP/1.0\r\n\r\n")
await writer.drain()
print("read response")
while True:
data = await reader.readline()
# avoid printing datetime which makes the test fail
if b"GMT" not in data:
print("read:", data)
if not data:
break
print("close")
writer.close()
await writer.wait_closed()
print("done")
asyncio.run(http_get("micropython.org", 443, client_ctx))