From e0477d457e5427ecc895f60d7d7cad0f812c4eff Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: =?UTF-8?q?=C5=81ukasz=20Langa?= <lukasz@langa.pl>
Date: Tue, 22 Aug 2023 19:53:15 +0200
Subject: [PATCH 1/3] gh-108310: Fix CVE-2023-40217: Check for & avoid the ssl
pre-close flaw (#108315)
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
Instances of `ssl.SSLSocket` were vulnerable to a bypass of the TLS handshake
and included protections (like certificate verification) and treating sent
unencrypted data as if it were post-handshake TLS encrypted data.
The vulnerability is caused when a socket is connected, data is sent by the
malicious peer and stored in a buffer, and then the malicious peer closes the
socket within a small timing window before the other peers’ TLS handshake can
begin. After this sequence of events the closed socket will not immediately
attempt a TLS handshake due to not being connected but will also allow the
buffered data to be read as if a successful TLS handshake had occurred.
Co-authored-by: Gregory P. Smith [Google LLC] <greg@krypto.org>
-----
Notable adjustments for Python 2.7:
Use alternative for self.getblocking(), which was added in Python 3.7
see: https://docs.python.org/3/library/socket.html#socket.socket.getblocking
Set self._sslobj early to avoid AttributeError
Use SSLError where necessary (it is not a subclass of OSError)
---
Lib/ssl.py | 32 +++
Lib/test/test_ssl.py | 210 ++++++++++++++++++
...-08-22-17-39-12.gh-issue-108310.fVM3sg.rst | 7 +
3 files changed, 249 insertions(+)
create mode 100644 Misc/NEWS.d/next/Security/2023-08-22-17-39-12.gh-issue-108310.fVM3sg.rst
diff --git a/Lib/ssl.py b/Lib/ssl.py
index 5311321..9627a77 100644
--- a/Lib/ssl.py
+++ b/Lib/ssl.py
@@ -528,6 +528,7 @@ class SSLSocket(socket):
server_hostname=None,
_context=None):
+ self._sslobj = None
self._makefile_refs = 0
if _context:
self._context = _context
@@ -583,6 +584,8 @@ class SSLSocket(socket):
self.do_handshake_on_connect = do_handshake_on_connect
self.suppress_ragged_eofs = suppress_ragged_eofs
+ sock_timeout = sock.gettimeout()
+
# See if we are connected
try:
self.getpeername()
@@ -590,9 +593,38 @@ class SSLSocket(socket):
if e.errno != errno.ENOTCONN:
raise
connected = False
+ blocking = (sock.gettimeout() != 0)
+ self.setblocking(False)
+ try:
+ # We are not connected so this is not supposed to block, but
+ # testing revealed otherwise on macOS and Windows so we do
+ # the non-blocking dance regardless. Our raise when any data
+ # is found means consuming the data is harmless.
+ notconn_pre_handshake_data = self.recv(1)
+ except socket_error as e:
+ # EINVAL occurs for recv(1) on non-connected on unix sockets.
+ if e.errno not in (errno.ENOTCONN, errno.EINVAL):
+ raise
+ notconn_pre_handshake_data = b''
+ self.setblocking(blocking)
+ if notconn_pre_handshake_data:
+ # This prevents pending data sent to the socket before it was
+ # closed from escaping to the caller who could otherwise
+ # presume it came through a successful TLS connection.
+ reason = "Closed before TLS handshake with data in recv buffer"
+ notconn_pre_handshake_data_error = SSLError(e.errno, reason)
+ # Add the SSLError attributes that _ssl.c always adds.
+ notconn_pre_handshake_data_error.reason = reason
+ notconn_pre_handshake_data_error.library = None
+ try:
+ self.close()
+ except OSError:
+ pass
+ raise notconn_pre_handshake_data_error
else:
connected = True
+ self.settimeout(sock_timeout) # Must come after setblocking() calls.
self._closed = False
self._sslobj = None
self._connected = connected
diff --git a/Lib/test/test_ssl.py b/Lib/test/test_ssl.py
index f6b42a0..8288e0e 100644
--- a/Lib/test/test_ssl.py
+++ b/Lib/test/test_ssl.py
@@ -8,9 +8,11 @@ from test.script_helper import assert_python_ok
import asyncore
import socket
import select
+import struct
import time
import datetime
import gc
+import httplib
import os
import errno
import pprint
@@ -2990,6 +2992,213 @@ else:
self.assertRaises(ValueError, s.read, 1024)
self.assertRaises(ValueError, s.write, b'hello')
+def set_socket_so_linger_on_with_zero_timeout(sock):
+ sock.setsockopt(socket.SOL_SOCKET, socket.SO_LINGER, struct.pack('ii', 1, 0))
+
+
+class TestPreHandshakeClose(unittest.TestCase):
+ """Verify behavior of close sockets with received data before to the handshake.
+ """
+
+ class SingleConnectionTestServerThread(threading.Thread):
+
+ def __init__(self, name, call_after_accept):
+ self.call_after_accept = call_after_accept
+ self.received_data = b'' # set by .run()
+ self.wrap_error = None # set by .run()
+ self.listener = None # set by .start()
+ self.port = None # set by .start()
+ threading.Thread.__init__(self, name=name)
+
+ def __enter__(self):
+ self.start()
+ return self
+
+ def __exit__(self, *args):
+ try:
+ if self.listener:
+ self.listener.close()
+ except ssl.SSLError:
+ pass
+ self.join()
+ self.wrap_error = None # avoid dangling references
+
+ def start(self):
+ self.ssl_ctx = ssl.create_default_context(ssl.Purpose.CLIENT_AUTH)
+ self.ssl_ctx.verify_mode = ssl.CERT_REQUIRED
+ self.ssl_ctx.load_verify_locations(cafile=ONLYCERT)
+ self.ssl_ctx.load_cert_chain(certfile=ONLYCERT, keyfile=ONLYKEY)
+ self.listener = socket.socket()
+ self.port = support.bind_port(self.listener)
+ self.listener.settimeout(2.0)
+ self.listener.listen(1)
+ threading.Thread.start(self)
+
+ def run(self):
+ conn, address = self.listener.accept()
+ self.listener.close()
+ with closing(conn):
+ if self.call_after_accept(conn):
+ return
+ try:
+ tls_socket = self.ssl_ctx.wrap_socket(conn, server_side=True)
+ except ssl.SSLError as err:
+ self.wrap_error = err
+ else:
+ try:
+ self.received_data = tls_socket.recv(400)
+ except OSError:
+ pass # closed, protocol error, etc.
+
+ def non_linux_skip_if_other_okay_error(self, err):
+ if sys.platform == "linux":
+ return # Expect the full test setup to always work on Linux.
+ if (isinstance(err, ConnectionResetError) or
+ (isinstance(err, OSError) and err.errno == errno.EINVAL) or
+ re.search('wrong.version.number', getattr(err, "reason", ""), re.I)):
+ # On Windows the TCP RST leads to a ConnectionResetError
+ # (ECONNRESET) which Linux doesn't appear to surface to userspace.
+ # If wrap_socket() winds up on the "if connected:" path and doing
+ # the actual wrapping... we get an SSLError from OpenSSL. Typically
+ # WRONG_VERSION_NUMBER. While appropriate, neither is the scenario
+ # we're specifically trying to test. The way this test is written
+ # is known to work on Linux. We'll skip it anywhere else that it
+ # does not present as doing so.
+ self.skipTest("Could not recreate conditions on {}: \
+ err={}".format(sys.platform,err))
+ # If maintaining this conditional winds up being a problem.
+ # just turn this into an unconditional skip anything but Linux.
+ # The important thing is that our CI has the logic covered.
+
+ def test_preauth_data_to_tls_server(self):
+ server_accept_called = threading.Event()
+ ready_for_server_wrap_socket = threading.Event()
+
+ def call_after_accept(unused):
+ server_accept_called.set()
+ if not ready_for_server_wrap_socket.wait(2.0):
+ raise RuntimeError("wrap_socket event never set, test may fail.")
+ return False # Tell the server thread to continue.
+
+ server = self.SingleConnectionTestServerThread(
+ call_after_accept=call_after_accept,
+ name="preauth_data_to_tls_server")
+ server.__enter__() # starts it
+ self.addCleanup(server.__exit__) # ... & unittest.TestCase stops it.
+
+ with closing(socket.socket()) as client:
+ client.connect(server.listener.getsockname())
+ # This forces an immediate connection close via RST on .close().
+ set_socket_so_linger_on_with_zero_timeout(client)
+ client.setblocking(False)
+
+ server_accept_called.wait()
+ client.send(b"DELETE /data HTTP/1.0\r\n\r\n")
+ client.close() # RST
+
+ ready_for_server_wrap_socket.set()
+ server.join()
+ wrap_error = server.wrap_error
+ self.assertEqual(b"", server.received_data)
+ self.assertIsInstance(wrap_error, ssl.SSLError)
+ self.assertIn("before TLS handshake with data", wrap_error.args[1])
+ self.assertIn("before TLS handshake with data", wrap_error.reason)
+ self.assertNotEqual(0, wrap_error.args[0])
+ self.assertIsNone(wrap_error.library, msg="attr must exist")
+
+ def test_preauth_data_to_tls_client(self):
+ client_can_continue_with_wrap_socket = threading.Event()
+
+ def call_after_accept(conn_to_client):
+ # This forces an immediate connection close via RST on .close().
+ set_socket_so_linger_on_with_zero_timeout(conn_to_client)
+ conn_to_client.send(
+ b"HTTP/1.0 307 Temporary Redirect\r\n"
+ b"Location: https://example.com/someone-elses-server\r\n"
+ b"\r\n")
+ conn_to_client.close() # RST
+ client_can_continue_with_wrap_socket.set()
+ return True # Tell the server to stop.
+
+ server = self.SingleConnectionTestServerThread(
+ call_after_accept=call_after_accept,
+ name="preauth_data_to_tls_client")
+ server.__enter__() # starts it
+ self.addCleanup(server.__exit__) # ... & unittest.TestCase stops it.
+
+ # Redundant; call_after_accept sets SO_LINGER on the accepted conn.
+ set_socket_so_linger_on_with_zero_timeout(server.listener)
+
+ with closing(socket.socket()) as client:
+ client.connect(server.listener.getsockname())
+ if not client_can_continue_with_wrap_socket.wait(2.0):
+ self.fail("test server took too long.")
+ ssl_ctx = ssl.create_default_context()
+ try:
+ tls_client = ssl_ctx.wrap_socket(
+ client, server_hostname="localhost")
+ except ssl.SSLError as err:
+ wrap_error = err
+ received_data = b""
+ else:
+ wrap_error = None
+ received_data = tls_client.recv(400)
+ tls_client.close()
+
+ server.join()
+ self.assertEqual(b"", received_data)
+ self.assertIsInstance(wrap_error, ssl.SSLError)
+ self.assertIn("before TLS handshake with data", wrap_error.args[1])
+ self.assertIn("before TLS handshake with data", wrap_error.reason)
+ self.assertNotEqual(0, wrap_error.args[0])
+ self.assertIsNone(wrap_error.library, msg="attr must exist")
+
+ def test_https_client_non_tls_response_ignored(self):
+
+ server_responding = threading.Event()
+
+ class SynchronizedHTTPSConnection(httplib.HTTPSConnection):
+ def connect(self):
+ httplib.HTTPConnection.connect(self)
+ # Wait for our fault injection server to have done its thing.
+ if not server_responding.wait(1.0) and support.verbose:
+ sys.stdout.write("server_responding event never set.")
+ self.sock = self._context.wrap_socket(
+ self.sock, server_hostname=self.host)
+
+ def call_after_accept(conn_to_client):
+ # This forces an immediate connection close via RST on .close().
+ set_socket_so_linger_on_with_zero_timeout(conn_to_client)
+ conn_to_client.send(
+ b"HTTP/1.0 402 Payment Required\r\n"
+ b"\r\n")
+ conn_to_client.close() # RST
+ server_responding.set()
+ return True # Tell the server to stop.
+
+ server = self.SingleConnectionTestServerThread(
+ call_after_accept=call_after_accept,
+ name="non_tls_http_RST_responder")
+ server.__enter__() # starts it
+ self.addCleanup(server.__exit__) # ... & unittest.TestCase stops it.
+ # Redundant; call_after_accept sets SO_LINGER on the accepted conn.
+ set_socket_so_linger_on_with_zero_timeout(server.listener)
+
+ connection = SynchronizedHTTPSConnection(
+ "localhost",
+ port=server.port,
+ context=ssl.create_default_context(),
+ timeout=2.0,
+ )
+ # There are lots of reasons this raises as desired, long before this
+ # test was added. Sending the request requires a successful TLS wrapped
+ # socket; that fails if the connection is broken. It may seem pointless
+ # to test this. It serves as an illustration of something that we never
+ # want to happen... properly not happening.
+ with self.assertRaises(ssl.SSLError) as err_ctx:
+ connection.request("HEAD", "/test", headers={"Host": "localhost"})
+ response = connection.getresponse()
+
def test_main(verbose=False):
if support.verbose:
@@ -3024,6 +3233,7 @@ def test_main(verbose=False):
raise support.TestFailed("Can't read certificate file %r" % filename)
tests = [ContextTests, BasicTests, BasicSocketTests, SSLErrorTests]
+ tests += [TestPreHandshakeClose]
if support.is_resource_enabled('network'):
tests.append(NetworkedTests)
diff --git a/Misc/NEWS.d/next/Security/2023-08-22-17-39-12.gh-issue-108310.fVM3sg.rst b/Misc/NEWS.d/next/Security/2023-08-22-17-39-12.gh-issue-108310.fVM3sg.rst
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..403c77a
--- /dev/null
+++ b/Misc/NEWS.d/next/Security/2023-08-22-17-39-12.gh-issue-108310.fVM3sg.rst
@@ -0,0 +1,7 @@
+Fixed an issue where instances of :class:`ssl.SSLSocket` were vulnerable to
+a bypass of the TLS handshake and included protections (like certificate
+verification) and treating sent unencrypted data as if it were
+post-handshake TLS encrypted data. Security issue reported as
+`CVE-2023-40217
+<https://cve.mitre.org/cgi-bin/cvename.cgi?name=CVE-2023-40217>`_ by
+Aapo Oksman. Patch by Gregory P. Smith.
--
2.41.0
From 82032d4fb71fb3a6e7c364b6e93c2c33ff49b1a5 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: "Miss Islington (bot)"
<31488909+miss-islington@users.noreply.github.com>
Date: Wed, 23 Aug 2023 03:10:56 -0700
Subject: [PATCH 2/3] gh-108342: Break ref cycle in SSLSocket._create() exc
(GH-108344) (#108352)
Explicitly break a reference cycle when SSLSocket._create() raises an
exception. Clear the variable storing the exception, since the
exception traceback contains the variables and so creates a reference
cycle.
This test leak was introduced by the test added for the fix of GH-108310.
(cherry picked from commit 64f99350351bc46e016b2286f36ba7cd669b79e3)
Co-authored-by: Victor Stinner <vstinner@python.org>
---
Lib/ssl.py | 6 +++++-
1 file changed, 5 insertions(+), 1 deletion(-)
diff --git a/Lib/ssl.py b/Lib/ssl.py
index 9627a77..ee3806e 100644
--- a/Lib/ssl.py
+++ b/Lib/ssl.py
@@ -620,7 +620,11 @@ class SSLSocket(socket):
self.close()
except OSError:
pass
- raise notconn_pre_handshake_data_error
+ try:
+ raise notconn_pre_handshake_data_error
+ finally:
+ # Explicitly break the reference cycle.
+ notconn_pre_handshake_data_error = None
else:
connected = True
--
2.41.0
From 960d54566e3da48e9dde1e9c1bd74c89c277244b Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: =?UTF-8?q?=C5=81ukasz=20Langa?= <lukasz@langa.pl>
Date: Thu, 24 Aug 2023 12:09:30 +0200
Subject: [PATCH 3/3] gh-108342: Make ssl TestPreHandshakeClose more reliable
(GH-108370) (#108408)
* In preauth tests of test_ssl, explicitly break reference cycles
invoving SingleConnectionTestServerThread to make sure that the
thread is deleted. Otherwise, the test marks the environment as
altered because the threading module sees a "dangling thread"
(SingleConnectionTestServerThread). This test leak was introduced
by the test added for the fix of issue gh-108310.
* Use support.SHORT_TIMEOUT instead of hardcoded 1.0 or 2.0 seconds
timeout.
* SingleConnectionTestServerThread.run() catchs TimeoutError
* Fix a race condition (missing synchronization) in
test_preauth_data_to_tls_client(): the server now waits until the
client connect() completed in call_after_accept().
* test_https_client_non_tls_response_ignored() calls server.join()
explicitly.
* Replace "localhost" with server.listener.getsockname()[0].
(cherry picked from commit 592bacb6fc0833336c0453e818e9b95016e9fd47)
---
Lib/test/test_ssl.py | 105 ++++++++++++++++++++++-----------------
Lib/test/test_support.py | 2 +
2 files changed, 62 insertions(+), 45 deletions(-)
diff --git a/Lib/test/test_ssl.py b/Lib/test/test_ssl.py
index 8288e0e..7795627 100644
--- a/Lib/test/test_ssl.py
+++ b/Lib/test/test_ssl.py
@@ -3002,12 +3002,16 @@ class TestPreHandshakeClose(unittest.TestCase):
class SingleConnectionTestServerThread(threading.Thread):
- def __init__(self, name, call_after_accept):
+ def __init__(self, name, call_after_accept, timeout=None):
self.call_after_accept = call_after_accept
self.received_data = b'' # set by .run()
self.wrap_error = None # set by .run()
self.listener = None # set by .start()
self.port = None # set by .start()
+ if timeout is None:
+ self.timeout = support.SHORT_TIMEOUT
+ else:
+ self.timeout = timeout
threading.Thread.__init__(self, name=name)
def __enter__(self):
@@ -3030,13 +3034,22 @@ class TestPreHandshakeClose(unittest.TestCase):
self.ssl_ctx.load_cert_chain(certfile=ONLYCERT, keyfile=ONLYKEY)
self.listener = socket.socket()
self.port = support.bind_port(self.listener)
- self.listener.settimeout(2.0)
+ self.listener.settimeout(self.timeout)
self.listener.listen(1)
threading.Thread.start(self)
def run(self):
- conn, address = self.listener.accept()
- self.listener.close()
+ try:
+ conn, address = self.listener.accept()
+ except OSError as e:
+ if e.errno == errno.ETIMEDOUT:
+ # on timeout, just close the listener
+ return
+ else:
+ raise
+ finally:
+ self.listener.close()
+
with closing(conn):
if self.call_after_accept(conn):
return
@@ -3050,33 +3063,13 @@ class TestPreHandshakeClose(unittest.TestCase):
except OSError:
pass # closed, protocol error, etc.
- def non_linux_skip_if_other_okay_error(self, err):
- if sys.platform == "linux":
- return # Expect the full test setup to always work on Linux.
- if (isinstance(err, ConnectionResetError) or
- (isinstance(err, OSError) and err.errno == errno.EINVAL) or
- re.search('wrong.version.number', getattr(err, "reason", ""), re.I)):
- # On Windows the TCP RST leads to a ConnectionResetError
- # (ECONNRESET) which Linux doesn't appear to surface to userspace.
- # If wrap_socket() winds up on the "if connected:" path and doing
- # the actual wrapping... we get an SSLError from OpenSSL. Typically
- # WRONG_VERSION_NUMBER. While appropriate, neither is the scenario
- # we're specifically trying to test. The way this test is written
- # is known to work on Linux. We'll skip it anywhere else that it
- # does not present as doing so.
- self.skipTest("Could not recreate conditions on {}: \
- err={}".format(sys.platform,err))
- # If maintaining this conditional winds up being a problem.
- # just turn this into an unconditional skip anything but Linux.
- # The important thing is that our CI has the logic covered.
-
def test_preauth_data_to_tls_server(self):
server_accept_called = threading.Event()
ready_for_server_wrap_socket = threading.Event()
def call_after_accept(unused):
server_accept_called.set()
- if not ready_for_server_wrap_socket.wait(2.0):
+ if not ready_for_server_wrap_socket.wait(support.SHORT_TIMEOUT):
raise RuntimeError("wrap_socket event never set, test may fail.")
return False # Tell the server thread to continue.
@@ -3098,18 +3091,28 @@ class TestPreHandshakeClose(unittest.TestCase):
ready_for_server_wrap_socket.set()
server.join()
+
wrap_error = server.wrap_error
- self.assertEqual(b"", server.received_data)
- self.assertIsInstance(wrap_error, ssl.SSLError)
- self.assertIn("before TLS handshake with data", wrap_error.args[1])
- self.assertIn("before TLS handshake with data", wrap_error.reason)
- self.assertNotEqual(0, wrap_error.args[0])
- self.assertIsNone(wrap_error.library, msg="attr must exist")
+ try:
+ self.assertEqual(b"", server.received_data)
+ self.assertIsInstance(wrap_error, ssl.SSLError)
+ self.assertIn("before TLS handshake with data", wrap_error.args[1])
+ self.assertIn("before TLS handshake with data", wrap_error.reason)
+ self.assertNotEqual(0, wrap_error.args[0])
+ self.assertIsNone(wrap_error.library, msg="attr must exist")
+ finally:
+ # gh-108342: Explicitly break the reference cycle
+ wrap_error = None
+ server = None
def test_preauth_data_to_tls_client(self):
+ server_can_continue_with_wrap_socket = threading.Event()
client_can_continue_with_wrap_socket = threading.Event()
def call_after_accept(conn_to_client):
+ if not server_can_continue_with_wrap_socket.wait(support.SHORT_TIMEOUT):
+ print("ERROR: test client took too long")
+
# This forces an immediate connection close via RST on .close().
set_socket_so_linger_on_with_zero_timeout(conn_to_client)
conn_to_client.send(
@@ -3131,8 +3134,10 @@ class TestPreHandshakeClose(unittest.TestCase):
with closing(socket.socket()) as client:
client.connect(server.listener.getsockname())
- if not client_can_continue_with_wrap_socket.wait(2.0):
- self.fail("test server took too long.")
+ server_can_continue_with_wrap_socket.set()
+
+ if not client_can_continue_with_wrap_socket.wait(support.SHORT_TIMEOUT):
+ self.fail("test server took too long")
ssl_ctx = ssl.create_default_context()
try:
tls_client = ssl_ctx.wrap_socket(
@@ -3146,22 +3151,29 @@ class TestPreHandshakeClose(unittest.TestCase):
tls_client.close()
server.join()
- self.assertEqual(b"", received_data)
- self.assertIsInstance(wrap_error, ssl.SSLError)
- self.assertIn("before TLS handshake with data", wrap_error.args[1])
- self.assertIn("before TLS handshake with data", wrap_error.reason)
- self.assertNotEqual(0, wrap_error.args[0])
- self.assertIsNone(wrap_error.library, msg="attr must exist")
+ try:
+ self.assertEqual(b"", received_data)
+ self.assertIsInstance(wrap_error, ssl.SSLError)
+ self.assertIn("before TLS handshake with data", wrap_error.args[1])
+ self.assertIn("before TLS handshake with data", wrap_error.reason)
+ self.assertNotEqual(0, wrap_error.args[0])
+ self.assertIsNone(wrap_error.library, msg="attr must exist")
+ finally:
+ # gh-108342: Explicitly break the reference cycle
+ wrap_error = None
+ server = None
def test_https_client_non_tls_response_ignored(self):
-
server_responding = threading.Event()
class SynchronizedHTTPSConnection(httplib.HTTPSConnection):
def connect(self):
+ # Call clear text HTTP connect(), not the encrypted HTTPS (TLS)
+ # connect(): wrap_socket() is called manually below.
httplib.HTTPConnection.connect(self)
+
# Wait for our fault injection server to have done its thing.
- if not server_responding.wait(1.0) and support.verbose:
+ if not server_responding.wait(support.SHORT_TIMEOUT) and support.verbose:
sys.stdout.write("server_responding event never set.")
self.sock = self._context.wrap_socket(
self.sock, server_hostname=self.host)
@@ -3176,29 +3188,32 @@ class TestPreHandshakeClose(unittest.TestCase):
server_responding.set()
return True # Tell the server to stop.
+ timeout = 2.0
server = self.SingleConnectionTestServerThread(
call_after_accept=call_after_accept,
- name="non_tls_http_RST_responder")
+ name="non_tls_http_RST_responder",
+ timeout=timeout)
server.__enter__() # starts it
self.addCleanup(server.__exit__) # ... & unittest.TestCase stops it.
# Redundant; call_after_accept sets SO_LINGER on the accepted conn.
set_socket_so_linger_on_with_zero_timeout(server.listener)
connection = SynchronizedHTTPSConnection(
- "localhost",
+ server.listener.getsockname()[0],
port=server.port,
context=ssl.create_default_context(),
- timeout=2.0,
+ timeout=timeout,
)
# There are lots of reasons this raises as desired, long before this
# test was added. Sending the request requires a successful TLS wrapped
# socket; that fails if the connection is broken. It may seem pointless
# to test this. It serves as an illustration of something that we never
# want to happen... properly not happening.
- with self.assertRaises(ssl.SSLError) as err_ctx:
+ with self.assertRaises(ssl.SSLError):
connection.request("HEAD", "/test", headers={"Host": "localhost"})
response = connection.getresponse()
+ server.join()
def test_main(verbose=False):
if support.verbose:
diff --git a/Lib/test/test_support.py b/Lib/test/test_support.py
index 98a9275..1536606 100644
--- a/Lib/test/test_support.py
+++ b/Lib/test/test_support.py
@@ -42,6 +42,8 @@ __all__ = ["Error", "TestFailed", "ResourceDenied", "import_module",
"import_fresh_module", "threading_cleanup", "reap_children",
"strip_python_stderr", "IPV6_ENABLED"]
+SHORT_TIMEOUT = 30.0 # Added to make backporting from 3.x easier
+
class Error(Exception):
"""Base class for regression test exceptions."""
--
2.41.0