Skip to content

Instantly share code, notes, and snippets.

@CalfCrusher
Forked from sakti/SimpleSecureHTTPServer.py
Created April 20, 2022 16:02
Show Gist options
  • Star 0 You must be signed in to star a gist
  • Fork 0 You must be signed in to fork a gist
  • Save CalfCrusher/159e7027836b428c452c477b79ffd657 to your computer and use it in GitHub Desktop.
Save CalfCrusher/159e7027836b428c452c477b79ffd657 to your computer and use it in GitHub Desktop.
simple secure http server using python
'''
SimpleSecureHTTPServer.py - simple HTTP server supporting SSL.
- replace fpem with the location of your .pem server file.
- the default port is 443.
usage: python SimpleSecureHTTPServer.py
Credit: https://code.activestate.com/recipes/442473-simple-http-server-supporting-ssl-secure-communica/
License: PSF License
'''
import socket, os
from SocketServer import BaseServer
from BaseHTTPServer import HTTPServer
from SimpleHTTPServer import SimpleHTTPRequestHandler
from OpenSSL import SSL
class SecureHTTPServer(HTTPServer):
def __init__(self, server_address, HandlerClass):
BaseServer.__init__(self, server_address, HandlerClass)
ctx = SSL.Context(SSL.SSLv23_METHOD)
#server.pem's location (containing the server private key and
#the server certificate).
fpem = 'server.pem'
ctx.use_privatekey_file (fpem)
ctx.use_certificate_file(fpem)
self.socket = SSL.Connection(ctx, socket.socket(self.address_family,
self.socket_type))
self.server_bind()
self.server_activate()
class SecureHTTPRequestHandler(SimpleHTTPRequestHandler):
def setup(self):
self.connection = self.request
self.rfile = socket._fileobject(self.request, "rb", self.rbufsize)
self.wfile = socket._fileobject(self.request, "wb", self.wbufsize)
def test(HandlerClass = SecureHTTPRequestHandler,
ServerClass = SecureHTTPServer):
server_address = ('', 443) # (address, port)
httpd = ServerClass(server_address, HandlerClass)
sa = httpd.socket.getsockname()
print "Serving HTTPS on", sa[0], "port", sa[1], "..."
httpd.serve_forever()
if __name__ == '__main__':
test()
Sign up for free to join this conversation on GitHub. Already have an account? Sign in to comment