Where (at what point in the code) does the pyAMF client accept the SSL certificate?

I configured a server listening on the SSL port. I can connect to it with the proper credentials. I can access the services (echo service in the example below)

The code below works fine, but I do not understand , at this moment the client accepts the certificate

Server:

import os.path
import logging
import cherrypy
from pyamf.remoting.gateway.wsgi import WSGIGateway

logging.basicConfig(
    level=logging.DEBUG,
    format='%(asctime)s %(levelname)-5.5s [%(name)s] %(message)s'
)

def auth(username, password):
    users = {"user": "pwd"}
    if (users.has_key(username) and users[username] == password):
            return True
    return False

def echo(data):
   return data

class Root(object):
    @cherrypy.expose
    def index(self):
            return "This is your main website"

gateway = WSGIGateway({'myservice.echo': echo,}, logger=logging, debug=True, authenticator=auth)

localDir = os.path.abspath(os.path.dirname(__file__))
CA = os.path.join(localDir, 'new.cert.cert')
KEY = os.path.join(localDir, 'new.cert.key')
global_conf = {'global': {'server.socket_port': 8443,
                      'environment': 'production',
                      'log.screen': True,
                      'server.ssl_certificate': CA,
                      'server.ssl_private_key': KEY}}

cherrypy.tree.graft(gateway, '/gateway/')
cherrypy.quickstart(Root(), config=global_conf)

Customer:

import logging
from pyamf.remoting.client import RemotingService

logging.basicConfig(
    level=logging.DEBUG,
    format='%(asctime)s %(levelname)-5.5s [%(name)s] %(message)s'
)

client = RemotingService('https://localhost:8443/gateway', logger=logging)
client.setCredentials('user', 'pwd')

service = client.getService('myservice')
print service.echo('Echo this')

Now, when I run this, it starts OK , the client log is below:

2010-01-18 00:50:56,323 INFO  [root] Connecting to https://localhost:8443/gateway
2010-01-18 00:50:56,323 DEBUG [root] Referer: None
2010-01-18 00:50:56,323 DEBUG [root] User-Agent: PyAMF/0.5.1
2010-01-18 00:50:56,323 DEBUG [root] Adding request myservice.echo('Echo this',)
2010-01-18 00:50:56,324 DEBUG [root] Executing single request: /1
2010-01-18 00:50:56,324 DEBUG [root] AMF version: 0
2010-01-18 00:50:56,324 DEBUG [root] Client type: 0
2010-01-18 00:50:56,326 DEBUG [root] Sending POST request to /gateway
2010-01-18 00:50:56,412 DEBUG [root] Waiting for response...
2010-01-18 00:50:56,467 DEBUG [root] Got response status: 200
2010-01-18 00:50:56,467 DEBUG [root] Content-Type: application/x-amf
2010-01-18 00:50:56,467 DEBUG [root] Content-Length: 41
2010-01-18 00:50:56,467 DEBUG [root] Server: PyAMF/0.5.1 Python/2.5.2
2010-01-18 00:50:56,467 DEBUG [root] Read 41 bytes for the response
2010-01-18 00:50:56,468 DEBUG [root] Response: <Envelope amfVersion=0 clientType=0>
 (u'/1', <Response status=/onResult>u'Echo this'</Response>)
</Envelope>
2010-01-18 00:50:56,468 DEBUG [root] Removing request: /1
Echo this

Line 2010-01-18 00: 50: 56,467 DEBUG [root] Reading 41 bytes for an answer looks suspicious, because the answer is too short (~ 1K certificate), and I'd expect that the certificate transfer will be in the debug log.

: ? ? ?

+3
1

PyAMF httplib . https://, httplib.HTTPSConnection connection RemotingService.

, ( HTTPSConnection):

.

, , key_file/cert_file connection.

connect - .

[root] POST /gateway

Read 41 bytes for the response - HTTP.

, - , .

+2

Source: https://habr.com/ru/post/1728883/


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