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Chilkat2-Python

Trust Specific Root CA Certificates

See more Certificates Examples

Demonstrates how to trust specific root CA certificates and none others.

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Chilkat2-Python
import sys
import chilkat2

success = False

# This example assumes the Chilkat API to have been previously unlocked.
# See Global Unlock Sample for sample code.

# This example will trust the Amazon root CA certificates provided at 
# https://www.amazontrust.com/repository/

# I've previously downloaded the root CA certificates to DER format.
# Add each to the Chilkat TrustedRoots singleton object.

tRoots = chilkat2.TrustedRoots()

caCert = chilkat2.Cert()
success = caCert.LoadFromFile("qa_data/certs/aws_root_ca/AmazonRootCA1.cer")
if (success == False):
    print(caCert.LastErrorText)
    sys.exit()

success = tRoots.AddCert(caCert)

# Continue with the others.
# For brevity, we're not checking return values for success/failure.
success = caCert.LoadFromFile("qa_data/certs/aws_root_ca/AmazonRootCA2.cer")
success = tRoots.AddCert(caCert)

success = caCert.LoadFromFile("qa_data/certs/aws_root_ca/AmazonRootCA3.cer")
success = tRoots.AddCert(caCert)

success = caCert.LoadFromFile("qa_data/certs/aws_root_ca/AmazonRootCA4.cer")
success = tRoots.AddCert(caCert)

success = caCert.LoadFromFile("qa_data/certs/aws_root_ca/SFSRootCAG2.cer")
success = tRoots.AddCert(caCert)

# Indicate we don't want to automatically trust the operating system's installed root CA certificates.
# On a Windows operating system, this would be the registry-based CA certificate stores. 
# On a Linux system, this could be /etc/ssl/certs/ca-certificates.crt, if it exists.
tRoots.TrustSystemCaRoots = False

# Activate the trusted roots object.
# Once activated, all Chilkat objects that use TLS connections (HTTP, REST, Socket, MailMan, IMAP, FTP, etc.)
# will fail the TLS handshake if the server certificate is not verified and rooted with one of our explicitly trusted root certificates.
success = tRoots.Activate()

http = chilkat2.Http()

# Note: We also need to explicitly indicate that server certificates are to be verified.
http.RequireSslCertVerify = True

# For example, the following should fail because www.chilkatsoft.com's server certificate is not rooted in one of the explicitly trusted root CA certs.
success = http.Download("https://www.chilkatsoft.com/helloWorld.txt","qa_output/helloWorld.txt")
if (success != True):
    # The above Download should fail.
    print(http.LastErrorText)

    # There should be a message in the LastErrorText indicating that we were "Unable to build certificate chain to root.."

# However, we should be able to make TLS connections to good.sca1a.amazontrust.com
success = http.Download("https://good.sca1a.amazontrust.com/","qa_output/valid.html")
if (success != True):
    print(http.LastErrorText)
    sys.exit()

# We can still examine the LastErrorText and we'll find this message within:  
# "The public key was successfully validated against the public key of the explicitly trusted root cert."
print(http.LastErrorText)

print("Success!")