1 /*
2  * This file is part of gtkD.
3  *
4  * gtkD is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
5  * it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public License
6  * as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 3
7  * of the License, or (at your option) any later version, with
8  * some exceptions, please read the COPYING file.
9  *
10  * gtkD is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
11  * but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
12  * MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the
13  * GNU Lesser General Public License for more details.
14  *
15  * You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public License
16  * along with gtkD; if not, write to the Free Software
17  * Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin St, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110, USA
18  */
19 
20 // generated automatically - do not change
21 // find conversion definition on APILookup.txt
22 // implement new conversion functionalities on the wrap.utils pakage
23 
24 
25 module gio.TlsConnection;
26 
27 private import gio.AsyncResultIF;
28 private import gio.Cancellable;
29 private import gio.IOStream;
30 private import gio.TlsCertificate;
31 private import gio.TlsDatabase;
32 private import gio.TlsInteraction;
33 private import glib.ErrorG;
34 private import glib.GException;
35 private import gobject.ObjectG;
36 private import gobject.Signals;
37 public  import gtkc.gdktypes;
38 private import gtkc.gio;
39 public  import gtkc.giotypes;
40 
41 
42 /**
43  * #GTlsConnection is the base TLS connection class type, which wraps
44  * a #GIOStream and provides TLS encryption on top of it. Its
45  * subclasses, #GTlsClientConnection and #GTlsServerConnection,
46  * implement client-side and server-side TLS, respectively.
47  *
48  * Since: 2.28
49  */
50 public class TlsConnection : IOStream
51 {
52 	/** the main Gtk struct */
53 	protected GTlsConnection* gTlsConnection;
54 
55 	/** Get the main Gtk struct */
56 	public GTlsConnection* getTlsConnectionStruct()
57 	{
58 		return gTlsConnection;
59 	}
60 
61 	/** the main Gtk struct as a void* */
62 	protected override void* getStruct()
63 	{
64 		return cast(void*)gTlsConnection;
65 	}
66 
67 	protected override void setStruct(GObject* obj)
68 	{
69 		gTlsConnection = cast(GTlsConnection*)obj;
70 		super.setStruct(obj);
71 	}
72 
73 	/**
74 	 * Sets our main struct and passes it to the parent class.
75 	 */
76 	public this (GTlsConnection* gTlsConnection, bool ownedRef = false)
77 	{
78 		this.gTlsConnection = gTlsConnection;
79 		super(cast(GIOStream*)gTlsConnection, ownedRef);
80 	}
81 
82 
83 	/** */
84 	public static GType getType()
85 	{
86 		return g_tls_connection_get_type();
87 	}
88 
89 	/**
90 	 * Used by #GTlsConnection implementations to emit the
91 	 * #GTlsConnection::accept-certificate signal.
92 	 *
93 	 * Params:
94 	 *     peerCert = the peer's #GTlsCertificate
95 	 *     errors = the problems with @peer_cert
96 	 *
97 	 * Return: %TRUE if one of the signal handlers has returned
98 	 *     %TRUE to accept @peer_cert
99 	 *
100 	 * Since: 2.28
101 	 */
102 	public bool emitAcceptCertificate(TlsCertificate peerCert, GTlsCertificateFlags errors)
103 	{
104 		return g_tls_connection_emit_accept_certificate(gTlsConnection, (peerCert is null) ? null : peerCert.getTlsCertificateStruct(), errors) != 0;
105 	}
106 
107 	/**
108 	 * Gets @conn's certificate, as set by
109 	 * g_tls_connection_set_certificate().
110 	 *
111 	 * Return: @conn's certificate, or %NULL
112 	 *
113 	 * Since: 2.28
114 	 */
115 	public TlsCertificate getCertificate()
116 	{
117 		auto p = g_tls_connection_get_certificate(gTlsConnection);
118 		
119 		if(p is null)
120 		{
121 			return null;
122 		}
123 		
124 		return ObjectG.getDObject!(TlsCertificate)(cast(GTlsCertificate*) p);
125 	}
126 
127 	/**
128 	 * Gets the certificate database that @conn uses to verify
129 	 * peer certificates. See g_tls_connection_set_database().
130 	 *
131 	 * Return: the certificate database that @conn uses or %NULL
132 	 *
133 	 * Since: 2.30
134 	 */
135 	public TlsDatabase getDatabase()
136 	{
137 		auto p = g_tls_connection_get_database(gTlsConnection);
138 		
139 		if(p is null)
140 		{
141 			return null;
142 		}
143 		
144 		return ObjectG.getDObject!(TlsDatabase)(cast(GTlsDatabase*) p);
145 	}
146 
147 	/**
148 	 * Get the object that will be used to interact with the user. It will be used
149 	 * for things like prompting the user for passwords. If %NULL is returned, then
150 	 * no user interaction will occur for this connection.
151 	 *
152 	 * Return: The interaction object.
153 	 *
154 	 * Since: 2.30
155 	 */
156 	public TlsInteraction getInteraction()
157 	{
158 		auto p = g_tls_connection_get_interaction(gTlsConnection);
159 		
160 		if(p is null)
161 		{
162 			return null;
163 		}
164 		
165 		return ObjectG.getDObject!(TlsInteraction)(cast(GTlsInteraction*) p);
166 	}
167 
168 	/**
169 	 * Gets @conn's peer's certificate after the handshake has completed.
170 	 * (It is not set during the emission of
171 	 * #GTlsConnection::accept-certificate.)
172 	 *
173 	 * Return: @conn's peer's certificate, or %NULL
174 	 *
175 	 * Since: 2.28
176 	 */
177 	public TlsCertificate getPeerCertificate()
178 	{
179 		auto p = g_tls_connection_get_peer_certificate(gTlsConnection);
180 		
181 		if(p is null)
182 		{
183 			return null;
184 		}
185 		
186 		return ObjectG.getDObject!(TlsCertificate)(cast(GTlsCertificate*) p);
187 	}
188 
189 	/**
190 	 * Gets the errors associated with validating @conn's peer's
191 	 * certificate, after the handshake has completed. (It is not set
192 	 * during the emission of #GTlsConnection::accept-certificate.)
193 	 *
194 	 * Return: @conn's peer's certificate errors
195 	 *
196 	 * Since: 2.28
197 	 */
198 	public GTlsCertificateFlags getPeerCertificateErrors()
199 	{
200 		return g_tls_connection_get_peer_certificate_errors(gTlsConnection);
201 	}
202 
203 	/**
204 	 * Gets @conn rehandshaking mode. See
205 	 * g_tls_connection_set_rehandshake_mode() for details.
206 	 *
207 	 * Return: @conn's rehandshaking mode
208 	 *
209 	 * Since: 2.28
210 	 */
211 	public GTlsRehandshakeMode getRehandshakeMode()
212 	{
213 		return g_tls_connection_get_rehandshake_mode(gTlsConnection);
214 	}
215 
216 	/**
217 	 * Tests whether or not @conn expects a proper TLS close notification
218 	 * when the connection is closed. See
219 	 * g_tls_connection_set_require_close_notify() for details.
220 	 *
221 	 * Return: %TRUE if @conn requires a proper TLS close
222 	 *     notification.
223 	 *
224 	 * Since: 2.28
225 	 */
226 	public bool getRequireCloseNotify()
227 	{
228 		return g_tls_connection_get_require_close_notify(gTlsConnection) != 0;
229 	}
230 
231 	/**
232 	 * Gets whether @conn uses the system certificate database to verify
233 	 * peer certificates. See g_tls_connection_set_use_system_certdb().
234 	 *
235 	 * Deprecated: Use g_tls_connection_get_database() instead
236 	 *
237 	 * Return: whether @conn uses the system certificate database
238 	 */
239 	public bool getUseSystemCertdb()
240 	{
241 		return g_tls_connection_get_use_system_certdb(gTlsConnection) != 0;
242 	}
243 
244 	/**
245 	 * Attempts a TLS handshake on @conn.
246 	 *
247 	 * On the client side, it is never necessary to call this method;
248 	 * although the connection needs to perform a handshake after
249 	 * connecting (or after sending a "STARTTLS"-type command) and may
250 	 * need to rehandshake later if the server requests it,
251 	 * #GTlsConnection will handle this for you automatically when you try
252 	 * to send or receive data on the connection. However, you can call
253 	 * g_tls_connection_handshake() manually if you want to know for sure
254 	 * whether the initial handshake succeeded or failed (as opposed to
255 	 * just immediately trying to write to @conn's output stream, in which
256 	 * case if it fails, it may not be possible to tell if it failed
257 	 * before or after completing the handshake).
258 	 *
259 	 * Likewise, on the server side, although a handshake is necessary at
260 	 * the beginning of the communication, you do not need to call this
261 	 * function explicitly unless you want clearer error reporting.
262 	 * However, you may call g_tls_connection_handshake() later on to
263 	 * renegotiate parameters (encryption methods, etc) with the client.
264 	 *
265 	 * #GTlsConnection::accept_certificate may be emitted during the
266 	 * handshake.
267 	 *
268 	 * Params:
269 	 *     cancellable = a #GCancellable, or %NULL
270 	 *
271 	 * Return: success or failure
272 	 *
273 	 * Since: 2.28
274 	 *
275 	 * Throws: GException on failure.
276 	 */
277 	public bool handshake(Cancellable cancellable)
278 	{
279 		GError* err = null;
280 		
281 		auto p = g_tls_connection_handshake(gTlsConnection, (cancellable is null) ? null : cancellable.getCancellableStruct(), &err) != 0;
282 		
283 		if (err !is null)
284 		{
285 			throw new GException( new ErrorG(err) );
286 		}
287 		
288 		return p;
289 	}
290 
291 	/**
292 	 * Asynchronously performs a TLS handshake on @conn. See
293 	 * g_tls_connection_handshake() for more information.
294 	 *
295 	 * Params:
296 	 *     ioPriority = the [I/O priority][io-priority] of the request
297 	 *     cancellable = a #GCancellable, or %NULL
298 	 *     callback = callback to call when the handshake is complete
299 	 *     userData = the data to pass to the callback function
300 	 *
301 	 * Since: 2.28
302 	 */
303 	public void handshakeAsync(int ioPriority, Cancellable cancellable, GAsyncReadyCallback callback, void* userData)
304 	{
305 		g_tls_connection_handshake_async(gTlsConnection, ioPriority, (cancellable is null) ? null : cancellable.getCancellableStruct(), callback, userData);
306 	}
307 
308 	/**
309 	 * Finish an asynchronous TLS handshake operation. See
310 	 * g_tls_connection_handshake() for more information.
311 	 *
312 	 * Params:
313 	 *     result = a #GAsyncResult.
314 	 *
315 	 * Return: %TRUE on success, %FALSE on failure, in which
316 	 *     case @error will be set.
317 	 *
318 	 * Since: 2.28
319 	 *
320 	 * Throws: GException on failure.
321 	 */
322 	public bool handshakeFinish(AsyncResultIF result)
323 	{
324 		GError* err = null;
325 		
326 		auto p = g_tls_connection_handshake_finish(gTlsConnection, (result is null) ? null : result.getAsyncResultStruct(), &err) != 0;
327 		
328 		if (err !is null)
329 		{
330 			throw new GException( new ErrorG(err) );
331 		}
332 		
333 		return p;
334 	}
335 
336 	/**
337 	 * This sets the certificate that @conn will present to its peer
338 	 * during the TLS handshake. For a #GTlsServerConnection, it is
339 	 * mandatory to set this, and that will normally be done at construct
340 	 * time.
341 	 *
342 	 * For a #GTlsClientConnection, this is optional. If a handshake fails
343 	 * with %G_TLS_ERROR_CERTIFICATE_REQUIRED, that means that the server
344 	 * requires a certificate, and if you try connecting again, you should
345 	 * call this method first. You can call
346 	 * g_tls_client_connection_get_accepted_cas() on the failed connection
347 	 * to get a list of Certificate Authorities that the server will
348 	 * accept certificates from.
349 	 *
350 	 * (It is also possible that a server will allow the connection with
351 	 * or without a certificate; in that case, if you don't provide a
352 	 * certificate, you can tell that the server requested one by the fact
353 	 * that g_tls_client_connection_get_accepted_cas() will return
354 	 * non-%NULL.)
355 	 *
356 	 * Params:
357 	 *     certificate = the certificate to use for @conn
358 	 *
359 	 * Since: 2.28
360 	 */
361 	public void setCertificate(TlsCertificate certificate)
362 	{
363 		g_tls_connection_set_certificate(gTlsConnection, (certificate is null) ? null : certificate.getTlsCertificateStruct());
364 	}
365 
366 	/**
367 	 * Sets the certificate database that is used to verify peer certificates.
368 	 * This is set to the default database by default. See
369 	 * g_tls_backend_get_default_database(). If set to %NULL, then
370 	 * peer certificate validation will always set the
371 	 * %G_TLS_CERTIFICATE_UNKNOWN_CA error (meaning
372 	 * #GTlsConnection::accept-certificate will always be emitted on
373 	 * client-side connections, unless that bit is not set in
374 	 * #GTlsClientConnection:validation-flags).
375 	 *
376 	 * Params:
377 	 *     database = a #GTlsDatabase
378 	 *
379 	 * Since: 2.30
380 	 */
381 	public void setDatabase(TlsDatabase database)
382 	{
383 		g_tls_connection_set_database(gTlsConnection, (database is null) ? null : database.getTlsDatabaseStruct());
384 	}
385 
386 	/**
387 	 * Set the object that will be used to interact with the user. It will be used
388 	 * for things like prompting the user for passwords.
389 	 *
390 	 * The @interaction argument will normally be a derived subclass of
391 	 * #GTlsInteraction. %NULL can also be provided if no user interaction
392 	 * should occur for this connection.
393 	 *
394 	 * Params:
395 	 *     interaction = an interaction object, or %NULL
396 	 *
397 	 * Since: 2.30
398 	 */
399 	public void setInteraction(TlsInteraction interaction)
400 	{
401 		g_tls_connection_set_interaction(gTlsConnection, (interaction is null) ? null : interaction.getTlsInteractionStruct());
402 	}
403 
404 	/**
405 	 * Sets how @conn behaves with respect to rehandshaking requests.
406 	 *
407 	 * %G_TLS_REHANDSHAKE_NEVER means that it will never agree to
408 	 * rehandshake after the initial handshake is complete. (For a client,
409 	 * this means it will refuse rehandshake requests from the server, and
410 	 * for a server, this means it will close the connection with an error
411 	 * if the client attempts to rehandshake.)
412 	 *
413 	 * %G_TLS_REHANDSHAKE_SAFELY means that the connection will allow a
414 	 * rehandshake only if the other end of the connection supports the
415 	 * TLS `renegotiation_info` extension. This is the default behavior,
416 	 * but means that rehandshaking will not work against older
417 	 * implementations that do not support that extension.
418 	 *
419 	 * %G_TLS_REHANDSHAKE_UNSAFELY means that the connection will allow
420 	 * rehandshaking even without the `renegotiation_info` extension. On
421 	 * the server side in particular, this is not recommended, since it
422 	 * leaves the server open to certain attacks. However, this mode is
423 	 * necessary if you need to allow renegotiation with older client
424 	 * software.
425 	 *
426 	 * Params:
427 	 *     mode = the rehandshaking mode
428 	 *
429 	 * Since: 2.28
430 	 */
431 	public void setRehandshakeMode(GTlsRehandshakeMode mode)
432 	{
433 		g_tls_connection_set_rehandshake_mode(gTlsConnection, mode);
434 	}
435 
436 	/**
437 	 * Sets whether or not @conn expects a proper TLS close notification
438 	 * before the connection is closed. If this is %TRUE (the default),
439 	 * then @conn will expect to receive a TLS close notification from its
440 	 * peer before the connection is closed, and will return a
441 	 * %G_TLS_ERROR_EOF error if the connection is closed without proper
442 	 * notification (since this may indicate a network error, or
443 	 * man-in-the-middle attack).
444 	 *
445 	 * In some protocols, the application will know whether or not the
446 	 * connection was closed cleanly based on application-level data
447 	 * (because the application-level data includes a length field, or is
448 	 * somehow self-delimiting); in this case, the close notify is
449 	 * redundant and sometimes omitted. (TLS 1.1 explicitly allows this;
450 	 * in TLS 1.0 it is technically an error, but often done anyway.) You
451 	 * can use g_tls_connection_set_require_close_notify() to tell @conn
452 	 * to allow an "unannounced" connection close, in which case the close
453 	 * will show up as a 0-length read, as in a non-TLS
454 	 * #GSocketConnection, and it is up to the application to check that
455 	 * the data has been fully received.
456 	 *
457 	 * Note that this only affects the behavior when the peer closes the
458 	 * connection; when the application calls g_io_stream_close() itself
459 	 * on @conn, this will send a close notification regardless of the
460 	 * setting of this property. If you explicitly want to do an unclean
461 	 * close, you can close @conn's #GTlsConnection:base-io-stream rather
462 	 * than closing @conn itself.
463 	 *
464 	 * Params:
465 	 *     requireCloseNotify = whether or not to require close notification
466 	 *
467 	 * Since: 2.28
468 	 */
469 	public void setRequireCloseNotify(bool requireCloseNotify)
470 	{
471 		g_tls_connection_set_require_close_notify(gTlsConnection, requireCloseNotify);
472 	}
473 
474 	/**
475 	 * Sets whether @conn uses the system certificate database to verify
476 	 * peer certificates. This is %TRUE by default. If set to %FALSE, then
477 	 * peer certificate validation will always set the
478 	 * %G_TLS_CERTIFICATE_UNKNOWN_CA error (meaning
479 	 * #GTlsConnection::accept-certificate will always be emitted on
480 	 * client-side connections, unless that bit is not set in
481 	 * #GTlsClientConnection:validation-flags).
482 	 *
483 	 * Deprecated: Use g_tls_connection_set_database() instead
484 	 *
485 	 * Params:
486 	 *     useSystemCertdb = whether to use the system certificate database
487 	 */
488 	public void setUseSystemCertdb(bool useSystemCertdb)
489 	{
490 		g_tls_connection_set_use_system_certdb(gTlsConnection, useSystemCertdb);
491 	}
492 
493 	int[string] connectedSignals;
494 
495 	bool delegate(TlsCertificate, GTlsCertificateFlags, TlsConnection)[] onAcceptCertificateListeners;
496 	/**
497 	 * Emitted during the TLS handshake after the peer certificate has
498 	 * been received. You can examine @peer_cert's certification path by
499 	 * calling g_tls_certificate_get_issuer() on it.
500 	 *
501 	 * For a client-side connection, @peer_cert is the server's
502 	 * certificate, and the signal will only be emitted if the
503 	 * certificate was not acceptable according to @conn's
504 	 * #GTlsClientConnection:validation_flags. If you would like the
505 	 * certificate to be accepted despite @errors, return %TRUE from the
506 	 * signal handler. Otherwise, if no handler accepts the certificate,
507 	 * the handshake will fail with %G_TLS_ERROR_BAD_CERTIFICATE.
508 	 *
509 	 * For a server-side connection, @peer_cert is the certificate
510 	 * presented by the client, if this was requested via the server's
511 	 * #GTlsServerConnection:authentication_mode. On the server side,
512 	 * the signal is always emitted when the client presents a
513 	 * certificate, and the certificate will only be accepted if a
514 	 * handler returns %TRUE.
515 	 *
516 	 * Note that if this signal is emitted as part of asynchronous I/O
517 	 * in the main thread, then you should not attempt to interact with
518 	 * the user before returning from the signal handler. If you want to
519 	 * let the user decide whether or not to accept the certificate, you
520 	 * would have to return %FALSE from the signal handler on the first
521 	 * attempt, and then after the connection attempt returns a
522 	 * %G_TLS_ERROR_HANDSHAKE, you can interact with the user, and if
523 	 * the user decides to accept the certificate, remember that fact,
524 	 * create a new connection, and return %TRUE from the signal handler
525 	 * the next time.
526 	 *
527 	 * If you are doing I/O in another thread, you do not
528 	 * need to worry about this, and can simply block in the signal
529 	 * handler until the UI thread returns an answer.
530 	 *
531 	 * Params:
532 	 *     peerCert = the peer's #GTlsCertificate
533 	 *     errors = the problems with @peer_cert.
534 	 *
535 	 * Return: %TRUE to accept @peer_cert (which will also
536 	 *     immediately end the signal emission). %FALSE to allow the signal
537 	 *     emission to continue, which will cause the handshake to fail if
538 	 *     no one else overrides it.
539 	 *
540 	 * Since: 2.28
541 	 */
542 	void addOnAcceptCertificate(bool delegate(TlsCertificate, GTlsCertificateFlags, TlsConnection) dlg, ConnectFlags connectFlags=cast(ConnectFlags)0)
543 	{
544 		if ( "accept-certificate" !in connectedSignals )
545 		{
546 			Signals.connectData(
547 				this,
548 				"accept-certificate",
549 				cast(GCallback)&callBackAcceptCertificate,
550 				cast(void*)this,
551 				null,
552 				connectFlags);
553 			connectedSignals["accept-certificate"] = 1;
554 		}
555 		onAcceptCertificateListeners ~= dlg;
556 	}
557 	extern(C) static int callBackAcceptCertificate(GTlsConnection* tlsconnectionStruct, GTlsCertificate* peerCert, GTlsCertificateFlags errors, TlsConnection _tlsconnection)
558 	{
559 		foreach ( bool delegate(TlsCertificate, GTlsCertificateFlags, TlsConnection) dlg; _tlsconnection.onAcceptCertificateListeners )
560 		{
561 			if ( dlg(ObjectG.getDObject!(TlsCertificate)(peerCert), errors, _tlsconnection) )
562 			{
563 				return 1;
564 			}
565 		}
566 		
567 		return 0;
568 	}
569 }