use Net::SSL; use LWP::UserAgent; my $ua = LWP::UserAgent->new( ssl_opts => { verify_hostname => 0 }, ); my $response = $ua->get('https://www.example.com/'); print $response->content, "\n";
The "Crypt::SSLeay" package provides "Net::SSL", which, if requested, is loaded by "LWP::Protocol::https" for https requests and provides the necessary SSL glue.
This distribution also makes following deprecated modules available:
Crypt::SSLeay::CTX Crypt::SSLeay::Conn Crypt::SSLeay::X509
If are using version "LWP" 6.02 or later, and therefore have installed "LWP::Protocol::https" and its dependencies, and do not explicitly "use" "Net::SSL" before loading "LWP::UserAgent", or override the default socket class, you are probably using "IO::Socket::SSL" and do not really need "Crypt::SSLeay".
If you have both "Crypt::SSLeay" and "IO::Socket::SSL" installed, and would like to force "LWP::UserAgent" to use "Crypt::SSLeay", you can use:
use Net::HTTPS; $Net::HTTPS::SSL_SOCKET_CLASS = 'Net::SSL'; use LWP::UserAgent;
or
local $ENV{PERL_NET_HTTPS_SSL_SOCKET_CLASS} = 'Net::SSL'; use LWP::UserAgent;
or
use Net::SSL; use LWP::UserAgent;
$ENV{HTTPS_PROXY} = 'http://proxy_hostname_or_ip:port';
$ENV{HTTPS_PROXY_USERNAME} = 'username'; $ENV{HTTPS_PROXY_PASSWORD} = 'password';
$ENV{HTTPS_DEBUG} = 1;
$ENV{HTTPS_VERSION} = '3';
$ENV{HTTPS_CERT_FILE} = 'certs/notacacert.pem'; $ENV{HTTPS_KEY_FILE} = 'certs/notacakeynopass.pem';
$ENV{HTTPS_CA_FILE} = 'certs/ca-bundle.crt'; $ENV{HTTPS_CA_DIR} = 'certs/';
$ENV{HTTPS_PKCS12_FILE} = 'certs/pkcs12.pkcs12'; $ENV{HTTPS_PKCS12_PASSWORD} = 'PKCS12_PASSWORD';
If you are building OpenSSL from source, please follow the directions included in the source package.
Default is false.
If everything builds OK, but you get failures when during tests, ensure that "LD_LIBRARY_PATH" points to the location where the correct shared libraries are located.
If you are using a custom OpenSSL build, please keep in mind that "Crypt::SSLeay" must be built using the same compiler and build tools used to build "perl" and OpenSSL. This can be more of an issue on Windows. If you are using Active State Perl, install the MinGW package distributed by them, and build OpenSSL using that before trying to build this module. If you have built your own Perl using Microsoft SDK tools or IDEs, make sure you build OpenSSL using the same tools.
Depending on your OS, pre-built OpenSSL packages may be available. To get the require headers and import libraries, you may need to install a development version of your operating system's OpenSSL library package. The key is that "Crypt::SSLeay" makes calls to the OpenSSL library, and how to do so is specified in the C header files that come with the library. Some systems break out the header files into a separate package from that of the libraries. Once the program has been built, you don't need the headers any more.
Once you have downloaded it, "Crypt::SSLeay" installs easily using the standard build process:
$ perl Makefile.PL $ make $ make test $ make install
or
$ cpanm Crypt::SSLeay
If you have OpenSSL headers and libraries in nonstandard locations, you can use
$ perl Makefile.PL --incpath=... --libpath=...
If you would like to use "cpanm" with such custom locations, you can do
$ OPENSSL_INCLUDE=... OPENSSL_LIB=... cpanm Crypt::SSLeay
or, on Windows,
> set OPENSSL_INCLUDE=... > set OPENSSL_LIB=... > cpanm Crypt::SSLeay
If you are on Windows, and using a MinGW distribution bundled with ActiveState Perl or Strawberry Perl, you would use "dmake" rather than "make". If you are using Microsoft's build tools, you would use "nmake".
For unattended (batch) installations, to be absolutely certain that Makefile.PL does not prompt for questions on STDIN, set the environment variable "PERL_MM_USE_DEFAULT=1" as with any CPAN module built using ExtUtils::MakeMaker.
VMS
I do not have any experience with VMS. If OpenSSL headers and libraries are not in standard locations searched by your build system by default, please set things up so that they are. If you have generic instructions on how to do it, please open a ticket on RT with the information so I can add it to this document.
my $ua = LWP::UserAgent->new; $ua->proxy([qw( https http )], "$proxy_ip:$proxy_port");
At the time of this writing, libwww v5.6 seems to proxy https requests fine with an Apache mod_proxy server. It sends a line like:
GET https://www.example.com HTTP/1.1
to the proxy server, which is not the "CONNECT" request that some proxies would expect, so this may not work with other proxy servers than mod_proxy. The "CONNECT" method is used by "Crypt::SSLeay"'s internal proxy support.
# proxy support $ENV{HTTPS_PROXY} = 'http://proxy_hostname_or_ip:port'; $ENV{HTTPS_PROXY} = '127.0.0.1:8080';
Use of the "HTTPS_PROXY" environment variable in this way is similar to "LWP::UserAgent-"env_proxy()> usage, but calling that method will likely override or break the "Crypt::SSLeay" support, so do not mix the two.
Basic auth credentials to the proxy server can be provided this way:
# proxy_basic_auth $ENV{HTTPS_PROXY_USERNAME} = 'username'; $ENV{HTTPS_PROXY_PASSWORD} = 'password';
For an example of LWP scripting with "Crypt::SSLeay" native proxy support, please look at the eg/lwp-ssl-test script in the "Crypt::SSLeay" distribution.
$ENV{HTTPS_CERT_FILE} = 'certs/notacacert.pem'; $ENV{HTTPS_KEY_FILE} = 'certs/notacakeynopass.pem';
You may test your files with the eg/net-ssl-test program, bundled with the distribution, by issuing a command like:
perl eg/net-ssl-test -cert=certs/notacacert.pem \ -key=certs/notacakeynopass.pem -d GET $HOST_NAME
Additionally, if you would like to tell the client where the CA file is, you may set these.
$ENV{HTTPS_CA_FILE} = "some_file"; $ENV{HTTPS_CA_DIR} = "some_dir";
Note that, if specified, $ENV{HTTPS_CA_FILE} must point to the actual certificate file. That is, $ENV{HTTPS_CA_DIR} is *not* the path were $ENV{HTTPS_CA_FILE} is located.
For certificates in $ENV{HTTPS_CA_DIR} to be picked up, follow the instructions on <http://www.openssl.org/docs/ssl/SSL_CTX_load_verify_locations.html>
There is no sample CA cert file at this time for testing, but you may configure eg/net-ssl-test to use your CA cert with the -CAfile option.
(TODO: then what is the ./certs directory in the distribution?)
openssl req -config /usr/local/openssl/openssl.cnf \ -new -days 365 -newkey rsa:1024 -x509 \ -keyout notacakey.pem -out notacacert.pem
To remove the pass phrase from the key file, run:
openssl rsa -in notacakey.pem -out notacakeynopass.pem
$ENV{HTTPS_PKCS12_FILE} = 'certs/pkcs12.pkcs12'; $ENV{HTTPS_PKCS12_PASSWORD} = 'PKCS12_PASSWORD';
Use of this type of certificate takes precedence over previous certificate settings described.
(TODO: unclear? Meaning ``the presence of this type of certificate''?)
Unfortunately, some servers seem not to handle a reconnect to SSL v3 after a failed connect of SSL v23 is tried, so you may set before using LWP or Net::SSL:
$ENV{HTTPS_VERSION} = 3;
to force a version 3 SSL connection first. At this time only a version 2 SSL connection will be tried after this, as the connection attempt order remains unchanged by this setting.
Gisle Aas for writing this module and many others including libwww, for perl. The web will never be the same :)
Ben Laurie deserves kudos for his excellent patches for better error handling, SSL information inspection, and random seeding.
Dongqiang Bai for host name resolution fix when using a proxy.
Stuart Horner of Core Communications, Inc. who found the need for building "--shared" OpenSSL libraries.
Pavel Hlavnicka for a patch for freeing memory when using a pkcs12 file, and for inspiring more robust "read()" behavior.
James Woodyatt is a champ for finding a ridiculous memory leak that has been the bane of many a Crypt::SSLeay user.
Bryan Hart for his patch adding proxy support, and thanks to Tobias Manthey for submitting another approach.
Alex Rhomberg for Alpha linux ccc patch.
Tobias Manthey for his patches for client certificate support.
Daisuke Kuroda for adding PKCS12 certificate support.
Gamid Isayev for CA cert support and insights into error messaging.
Jeff Long for working through a tricky CA cert SSLClientVerify issue.
Chip Turner for a patch to build under perl 5.8.0.
Joshua Chamas for the time he spent maintaining the module.
Jeff Lavallee for help with alarms on read failures (CPAN bug #12444).
Guenter Knauf for significant improvements in configuring things in Win32 and Netware lands and Jan Dubois for various suggestions for improvements.
and many others who provided bug reports, suggestions, fixes and patches.
If you have reported a bug or provided feedback, and you would like to be mentioned by name in this section, please file request on rt.cpan.org <http://rt.cpan.org/NoAuth/Bugs.html?Dist=Crypt-SSLeay>.
For OpenSSL or general SSL support, including issues associated with building and installing OpenSSL on your system, please email the OpenSSL users mailing list at "openssl-users@openssl.org". See <http://www.openssl.org/support/community.html> for other mailing lists and archives.
Please report all bugs using rt.cpan.org <http://rt.cpan.org/NoAuth/Bugs.html?Dist=Crypt-SSLeay>.
Copyright (c) 2006-2007 David Landgren
Copyright (c) 1999-2003 Joshua Chamas