# Test just the SSL support in the socket module, in a moderately bogus way. from test import test_support import socket # Optionally test SSL support. This requires the 'network' resource as given # on the regrtest command line. skip_expected = not (test_support.is_resource_enabled('network') and hasattr(socket, "ssl")) def test_basic(): test_support.requires('network') import urllib socket.RAND_status() try: socket.RAND_egd(1) except TypeError: pass else: print "didn't raise TypeError" socket.RAND_add("this is a random string", 75.0) f = urllib.urlopen('https://sf.net') buf = f.read() f.close() def test_rude_shutdown(): try: import threading except ImportError: return # Some random port to connect to. PORT = 9934 listener_ready = threading.Event() listener_gone = threading.Event() # `listener` runs in a thread. It opens a socket listening on PORT, and # sits in an accept() until the main thread connects. Then it rudely # closes the socket, and sets Event `listener_gone` to let the main thread # know the socket is gone. def listener(): s = socket.socket() s.bind(('', PORT)) s.listen(5) listener_ready.set() s.accept() s = None # reclaim the socket object, which also closes it listener_gone.set() def connector(): listener_ready.wait() s = socket.socket() s.connect(('localhost', PORT)) listener_gone.wait() try: ssl_sock = socket.ssl(s) except socket.sslerror: pass else: raise test_support.TestFailed( 'connecting to closed SSL socket should have failed') t = threading.Thread(target=listener) t.start() connector() t.join() def test_main(): if not hasattr(socket, "ssl"): raise test_support.TestSkipped("socket module has no ssl support") test_rude_shutdown() test_basic() if __name__ == "__main__": test_main()