import os from . import errors class TLSConfig: """ TLS configuration. Args: client_cert (tuple of str): Path to client cert, path to client key. ca_cert (str): Path to CA cert file. verify (bool or str): This can be a bool or a path to a CA cert file to verify against. If ``True``, verify using ca_cert; if ``False`` or not specified, do not verify. """ cert = None ca_cert = None verify = None def __init__(self, client_cert=None, ca_cert=None, verify=None): # Argument compatibility/mapping with # https://docs.docker.com/engine/articles/https/ # This diverges from the Docker CLI in that users can specify 'tls' # here, but also disable any public/default CA pool verification by # leaving verify=False # "client_cert" must have both or neither cert/key files. In # either case, Alert the user when both are expected, but any are # missing. if client_cert: try: tls_cert, tls_key = client_cert except ValueError: raise errors.TLSParameterError( 'client_cert must be a tuple of' ' (client certificate, key file)' ) from None if not (tls_cert and tls_key) or (not os.path.isfile(tls_cert) or not os.path.isfile(tls_key)): raise errors.TLSParameterError( 'Path to a certificate and key files must be provided' ' through the client_cert param' ) self.cert = (tls_cert, tls_key) # If verify is set, make sure the cert exists self.verify = verify self.ca_cert = ca_cert if self.verify and self.ca_cert and not os.path.isfile(self.ca_cert): raise errors.TLSParameterError( 'Invalid CA certificate provided for `ca_cert`.' ) def configure_client(self, client): """ Configure a client with these TLS options. """ if self.verify and self.ca_cert: client.verify = self.ca_cert else: client.verify = self.verify if self.cert: client.cert = self.cert