Provided by: libneon27-gnutls-dev_0.32.5-1_amd64
NAME
ne_ssl_set_verify - register an SSL certificate verification callback
SYNOPSIS
#include <ne_session.h> typedef int ne_ssl_verify_fn(void *userdata, int failures, const ne_ssl_certificate *cert); void ne_ssl_set_verify(ne_session *session, ne_ssl_verify_fn verify_fn, void *userdata);
DESCRIPTION
To enable manual SSL certificate verification, a callback can be registered using ne_ssl_set_verify. If such a callback is not registered, when a connection is established to an SSL server which does not present a certificate signed by a trusted CA (see ne_ssl_trust_cert), or if the certificate presented is invalid in some way, the connection will fail. When the callback is invoked, the failures parameter gives a bitmask indicating in what way the automatic certificate verification failed. The value is equal to the bit-wise OR of one or more of the following constants (and is guaranteed to be non-zero): NE_SSL_NOTYETVALID The certificate is not yet valid. NE_SSL_EXPIRED The certificate has expired. NE_SSL_IDMISMATCH The hostname used for the session does not match the hostname to which the certificate was issued. NE_SSL_UNTRUSTED The Certificate Authority which signed the certificate is not trusted. Note that if either of the NE_SSL_IDMISMATCH or NE_SSL_UNTRUSTED failures is given, the connection may have been intercepted by a third party, and must not be presumed to be “secure”. The cert parameter passed to the callback represents the certificate which was presented by the server. If the server presented a chain of certificates, the chain can be accessed using ne_ssl_cert_signedby. The cert object given is not valid after the callback returns.
RETURN VALUE
The verification callback must return zero to indicate that the certificate should be trusted; and non-zero otherwise (in which case, the connection will fail).
EXAMPLES
The following code implements an example verification callback, using the dump_cert function from ne_ssl_cert_subject to display certification information. Notice that the hostname of the server used for the session is passed as the userdata parameter to the callback. static int my_verify(void *userdata, int failures, const ne_ssl_certificate *cert) { const char *hostname = userdata; dump_cert(cert); puts("Certificate verification failed - the connection may have been " "intercepted by a third party!"); if (failures & NE_SSL_IDMISMATCH) { const char *id = ne_ssl_cert_identity(cert); if (id) printf("Server certificate was issued to '%s' not '%s'.\n", id, hostname); else printf("The certificate was not issued for '%s'\n", hostname); } if (failures & NE_SSL_UNTRUSTED) puts("The certificate is not signed by a trusted Certificate Authority."); /* ... check for validity failures ... */ if (prompt_user()) return 1; /* fail verification */ else return 0; /* trust the certificate anyway */ } int main(...) { ne_session *sess = ne_session_create("https", "some.host.name", 443); ne_ssl_set_verify(sess, my_verify, "some.host.name"); ... }
SEE ALSO
ne_ssl_trust_cert, ne_ssl_readable_dname, ne_ssl_cert_subject
AUTHOR
Joe Orton Author.