QDtls#
This class provides encryption for UDP sockets. More…
Synopsis#
Functions#
def
abortHandshake
(socket)def
decryptDatagram
(socket, dgram)def
doHandshake
(socket[, dgram={}])def
dtlsConfiguration
()def
dtlsError
()def
dtlsErrorString
()def
handleTimeout
(socket)def
handshakeState
()def
ignoreVerificationErrors
(errorsToIgnore)def
isConnectionEncrypted
()def
mtuHint
()def
peerAddress
()def
peerPort
()def
peerVerificationErrors
()def
peerVerificationName
()def
resumeHandshake
(socket)def
sessionCipher
()def
sessionProtocol
()def
setDtlsConfiguration
(configuration)def
setMtuHint
(mtuHint)def
setPeer
(address, port[, verificationName={}])def
setPeerVerificationName
(name)def
shutdown
(socket)def
sslMode
()def
writeDatagramEncrypted
(socket, dgram)
Signals#
def
handshakeTimeout
()def
pskRequired
(authenticator)
Note
This documentation may contain snippets that were automatically translated from C++ to Python. We always welcome contributions to the snippet translation. If you see an issue with the translation, you can also let us know by creating a ticket on https:/bugreports.qt.io/projects/PYSIDE
Detailed Description#
Warning
This section contains snippets that were automatically translated from C++ to Python and may contain errors.
The QDtls
class can be used to establish a secure connection with a network peer using User Datagram Protocol (UDP). DTLS connection over essentially connectionless UDP means that two peers first have to successfully complete a TLS handshake by calling doHandshake()
. After the handshake has completed, encrypted datagrams can be sent to the peer using writeDatagramEncrypted()
. Encrypted datagrams coming from the peer can be decrypted by decryptDatagram()
.
QDtls
is designed to work with QUdpSocket
. Since QUdpSocket
can receive datagrams coming from different peers, an application must implement demultiplexing, forwarding datagrams coming from different peers to their corresponding instances of QDtls
. An association between a network peer and its QDtls
object can be established using the peer’s address and port number. Before starting a handshake, the application must set the peer’s address and port number using setPeer()
.
QDtls
does not read datagrams from QUdpSocket
, this is expected to be done by the application, for example, in a slot attached to the readyRead()
signal. Then, these datagrams must be processed by QDtls
.
Note
QDtls
does not take ownership of the QUdpSocket
object.
Normally, several datagrams are to be received and sent by both peers during the handshake phase. Upon reading datagrams, server and client must pass these datagrams to doHandshake()
until some error is found or handshakeState()
returns HandshakeComplete
:
# A client initiates a handshake: clientSocket = QUdpSocket() clientDtls = QDtls() clientDtls.setPeer(address, port, peerName) clientDtls.doHandshake(clientSocket) # A server accepting an incoming connection; address, port, clientHello are # read by QUdpSocket::readDatagram(): clientHello = QByteArray(serverSocket.pendingDatagramSize(), Qt.Uninitialized) address = QHostAddress() port = {} serverSocket.readDatagram(clientHello.data(), clientHello.size(), address, port) serverDtls = QDtls() serverDtls.setPeer(address, port) serverDtls.doHandshake(serverSocket, clientHello) # Handshake completion, both for server and client: def continueHandshake(self, datagram): if dtls.doHandshake(udpSocket, datagram): # Check handshake status: if dtls.handshakeStatus() == QDlts.HandshakeComplete: # Secure DTLS connection is now established. else: # Error handling.
For a server, the first call to doHandshake()
requires a non-empty datagram containing a ClientHello message. If the server also deploys QDtlsClientVerifier
, the first ClientHello message is expected to be the one verified by QDtlsClientVerifier
.
In case the peer’s identity cannot be validated during the handshake, the application must inspect errors returned by peerVerificationErrors()
and then either ignore errors by calling ignoreVerificationErrors()
or abort the handshake by calling abortHandshake()
. If errors were ignored, the handshake can be resumed by calling resumeHandshake()
.
After the handshake has been completed, datagrams can be sent to and received from the network peer securely:
# Sending an encrypted datagram: dtlsConnection.writeDatagramEncrypted(clientSocket, "Hello DTLS server!") # Decryption: encryptedMessage = QByteArray(dgramSize) socket.readDatagram(encryptedMessage.data(), dgramSize) plainText = dtlsConnection.decryptDatagram(socket, encryptedMessage)
A DTLS connection may be closed using shutdown()
.
DtlsClient.~DtlsClient() clientDtls.shutdown(clientSocket)
Warning
It’s recommended to call shutdown()
before destroying the client’s QDtls
object if you are planning to re-use the same port number to connect to the server later. Otherwise, the server may drop incoming ClientHello messages, see RFC 6347, section 4.2.8 for more details and implementation hints.
If the server does not use QDtlsClientVerifier
, it must configure its QDtls
objects to disable the cookie verification procedure:
config = QSslConfiguration.defaultDtlsConfiguration() config.setDtlsCookieVerificationEnabled(False) # Some other customization ... dtlsConnection.setDtlsConfiguration(config)
A server that uses cookie verification with non-default generator parameters must set the same parameters for its QDtls
object before starting the handshake.
Note
The DTLS protocol leaves Path Maximum Transmission Unit (PMTU) discovery to the application. The application may provide QDtls
with the MTU using setMtuHint()
. This hint affects only the handshake phase, since only handshake messages can be fragmented and reassembled by the DTLS. All other messages sent by the application must fit into a single datagram.
Note
DTLS-specific headers add some overhead to application data further reducing the possible message size.
Warning
A server configured to reply with HelloVerifyRequest will drop all fragmented ClientHello messages, never starting a handshake.
The DTLS server and DTLS client examples illustrate how to use QDtls
in applications.
See also
QUdpSocket
QDtlsClientVerifier
HandshakeState
QDtlsError
QSslConfiguration
- class PySide6.QtNetwork.QDtls(mode[, parent=None])#
- Parameters:
mode –
SslMode
parent –
PySide6.QtCore.QObject
Creates a QDtls
object, parent
is passed to the QObject
constructor. mode
is SslServerMode
for a server-side DTLS connection or SslClientMode
for a client.
See also
sslMode()
SslMode
- PySide6.QtNetwork.QDtls.HandshakeState#
Describes the current state of DTLS handshake.
This enum describes the current state of DTLS handshake for a QDtls
connection.
Constant
Description
QDtls.HandshakeNotStarted
Nothing done yet.
QDtls.HandshakeInProgress
Handshake was initiated and no errors were found so far.
QDtls.PeerVerificationFailed
The identity of the peer can’t be established.
QDtls.HandshakeComplete
Handshake completed successfully and encrypted connection was established.
See also
- PySide6.QtNetwork.QDtls.abortHandshake(socket)#
- Parameters:
socket –
PySide6.QtNetwork.QUdpSocket
- Return type:
bool
Aborts the ongoing handshake. Returns true if one was on-going on socket
; otherwise, sets a suitable error and returns false.
See also
- PySide6.QtNetwork.QDtls.decryptDatagram(socket, dgram)#
- Parameters:
socket –
PySide6.QtNetwork.QUdpSocket
dgram –
PySide6.QtCore.QByteArray
- Return type:
Decrypts dgram
and returns its contents as plain text. The handshake must be completed before datagrams can be decrypted. Depending on the type of the TLS message the connection may write into socket
, which must be a valid pointer.
- PySide6.QtNetwork.QDtls.doHandshake(socket[, dgram={}])#
- Parameters:
socket –
PySide6.QtNetwork.QUdpSocket
dgram –
PySide6.QtCore.QByteArray
- Return type:
bool
Warning
This section contains snippets that were automatically translated from C++ to Python and may contain errors.
Starts or continues a DTLS handshake. socket
must be a valid pointer. When starting a server-side DTLS handshake, dgram
must contain the initial ClientHello message read from QUdpSocket
. This function returns true
if no error was found. Handshake state can be tested using handshakeState()
. false
return means some error occurred, use dtlsError()
for more detailed information.
Note
If the identity of the peer can’t be established, the error is set to PeerVerificationError
. If you want to ignore verification errors and continue connecting, you must call ignoreVerificationErrors()
and then resumeHandshake()
. If the errors cannot be ignored, you must call abortHandshake()
.
if not dtls.doHandshake(socket, dgram):
if dtls.dtlsError() == QDtlsError.PeerVerificationError:
dtls.abortAfterError(socket)
- PySide6.QtNetwork.QDtls.dtlsConfiguration()#
- Return type:
Returns either the default DTLS configuration or the configuration set by an earlier call to setDtlsConfiguration()
.
- PySide6.QtNetwork.QDtls.dtlsError()#
- Return type:
QDtlsError
Returns the last error encountered by the connection or NoError
.
See also
dtlsErrorString()
QDtlsError
- PySide6.QtNetwork.QDtls.dtlsErrorString()#
- Return type:
str
Returns a textual description for the last error encountered by the connection or empty string.
See also
- PySide6.QtNetwork.QDtls.handleTimeout(socket)#
- Parameters:
socket –
PySide6.QtNetwork.QUdpSocket
- Return type:
bool
If a timeout occurs during the handshake, the handshakeTimeout()
signal is emitted. The application must call handleTimeout() to retransmit handshake messages; handleTimeout() returns true
if a timeout has occurred, false otherwise. socket
must be a valid pointer.
See also
- PySide6.QtNetwork.QDtls.handshakeState()#
- Return type:
Returns the current handshake state for this QDtls
.
See also
doHandshake()
HandshakeState
- PySide6.QtNetwork.QDtls.handshakeTimeout()#
Warning
This section contains snippets that were automatically translated from C++ to Python and may contain errors.
Packet loss can result in timeouts during the handshake phase. In this case QDtls
emits a handshakeTimeout() signal. Call handleTimeout()
to retransmit the handshake messages:
def __init__(self): # Some initialization code here ... clientDtls.handshakeTimeout.connect(self.handleTimeout) def handleTimeout(self): clientDtls.handleTimeout(clientSocket)See also
- PySide6.QtNetwork.QDtls.ignoreVerificationErrors(errorsToIgnore)#
- Parameters:
errorsToIgnore –
Warning
This section contains snippets that were automatically translated from C++ to Python and may contain errors.
This method tells QDtls
to ignore only the errors given in errorsToIgnore
.
If, for instance, you want to connect to a server that uses a self-signed certificate, consider the following snippet:
cert = QSslCertificate.fromPath("server-certificate.pem") error = QSslError(QSslError.SelfSignedCertificate, cert.at(0)) expectedSslErrors = QList() expectedSslErrors.append(error) dtls = QDtls() dtls.ignoreVerificationErrors(expectedSslErrors) dtls.doHandshake(udpSocket)
You can also call this function after doHandshake()
encountered the PeerVerificationError
error, and then resume the handshake by calling resumeHandshake()
.
Later calls to this function will replace the list of errors that were passed in previous calls. You can clear the list of errors you want to ignore by calling this function with an empty list.
See also
- PySide6.QtNetwork.QDtls.isConnectionEncrypted()#
- Return type:
bool
Returns true
if DTLS handshake completed successfully.
See also
- PySide6.QtNetwork.QDtls.mtuHint()#
- Return type:
quint16
Returns the value previously set by setMtuHint()
. The default value is 0.
See also
- PySide6.QtNetwork.QDtls.peerAddress()#
- Return type:
Returns the peer’s address, set by setPeer()
, or Null
.
See also
- PySide6.QtNetwork.QDtls.peerPort()#
- Return type:
quint16
Returns the peer’s port number, set by setPeer()
, or 0.
See also
- PySide6.QtNetwork.QDtls.peerVerificationErrors()#
- Return type:
Returns errors found while establishing the identity of the peer.
If you want to continue connecting despite the errors that have occurred, you must call ignoreVerificationErrors()
.
- PySide6.QtNetwork.QDtls.peerVerificationName()#
- Return type:
str
Returns the host name set by setPeer()
or setPeerVerificationName()
. The default value is an empty string.
See also
- PySide6.QtNetwork.QDtls.pskRequired(authenticator)#
- Parameters:
authenticator –
PySide6.QtNetwork.QSslPreSharedKeyAuthenticator
QDtls
emits this signal when it negotiates a PSK ciphersuite, and therefore a PSK authentication is then required.
When using PSK, the client must send to the server a valid identity and a valid pre shared key, in order for the TLS handshake to continue. Applications can provide this information in a slot connected to this signal, by filling in the passed authenticator
object according to their needs.
Note
Ignoring this signal, or failing to provide the required credentials, will cause the handshake to fail, and therefore the connection to be aborted.
Note
The authenticator
object is owned by QDtls
and must not be deleted by the application.
See also
- PySide6.QtNetwork.QDtls.resumeHandshake(socket)#
- Parameters:
socket –
PySide6.QtNetwork.QUdpSocket
- Return type:
bool
If peer verification errors were ignored during the handshake, resumeHandshake() resumes and completes the handshake and returns true
. socket
must be a valid pointer. Returns false
if the handshake could not be resumed.
- PySide6.QtNetwork.QDtls.sessionCipher()#
- Return type:
Returns the cryptographic cipher
used by this connection, or a null cipher if the connection isn’t encrypted. The cipher for the session is selected during the handshake phase. The cipher is used to encrypt and decrypt data.
QSslConfiguration
provides functions for setting the ordered list of ciphers from which the handshake phase will eventually select the session cipher. This ordered list must be in place before the handshake phase begins.
- PySide6.QtNetwork.QDtls.sessionProtocol()#
- Return type:
Returns the DTLS protocol version used by this connection, or UnknownProtocol if the connection isn’t encrypted yet. The protocol for the connection is selected during the handshake phase.
setDtlsConfiguration()
can set the preferred version before the handshake starts.
- PySide6.QtNetwork.QDtls.setDtlsConfiguration(configuration)#
- Parameters:
configuration –
PySide6.QtNetwork.QSslConfiguration
- Return type:
bool
Sets the connection’s TLS configuration from configuration
and returns true
if successful.
Note
This function must be called before the handshake starts.
See also
- PySide6.QtNetwork.QDtls.setMtuHint(mtuHint)#
- Parameters:
mtuHint –
quint16
mtuHint
is the maximum transmission unit (MTU), either discovered or guessed by the application. The application is not required to set this value.
See also
mtuHint()
PathMtuSocketOption
- PySide6.QtNetwork.QDtls.setPeer(address, port[, verificationName={}])#
- Parameters:
address –
PySide6.QtNetwork.QHostAddress
port –
quint16
verificationName – str
- Return type:
bool
Sets the peer’s address, port
, and host name and returns true
if successful. address
must not be null, multicast, or broadcast. verificationName
is the host name used for the certificate validation.
- PySide6.QtNetwork.QDtls.setPeerVerificationName(name)#
- Parameters:
name – str
- Return type:
bool
Sets the host name
that will be used for the certificate validation and returns true
if successful.
Note
This function must be called before the handshake starts.
See also
- PySide6.QtNetwork.QDtls.shutdown(socket)#
- Parameters:
socket –
PySide6.QtNetwork.QUdpSocket
- Return type:
bool
Sends an encrypted shutdown alert message and closes the DTLS connection. Handshake state changes to HandshakeNotStarted
. socket
must be a valid pointer. This function returns true
on success.
See also
Returns SslServerMode
for a server-side connection and SslClientMode
for a client.
See also
QDtls()
SslMode
- PySide6.QtNetwork.QDtls.writeDatagramEncrypted(socket, dgram)#
- Parameters:
socket –
PySide6.QtNetwork.QUdpSocket
dgram –
PySide6.QtCore.QByteArray
- Return type:
int
Encrypts dgram
and writes the encrypted data into socket
. Returns the number of bytes written, or -1 in case of error. The handshake must be completed before writing encrypted data. socket
must be a valid pointer.