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TLS (SSL)

目录

自 v0.10.0 版本开始新增

稳定级别:2 - Stable

The node:tls module provides an implementation of the Transport Layer Security (TLS) and Secure Socket Layer (SSL) protocols that is built on top of OpenSSL. The module can be accessed using:

JS

Determining if crypto support is unavailable

It is possible for Node.js to be built without including support for the node:crypto module. In such cases, attempting to import from tls or calling require('node:tls') will result in an error being thrown.

When using CommonJS, the error thrown can be caught using try/catch:

CJS

When using the lexical ESM import keyword, the error can only be caught if a handler for process.on('uncaughtException') is registered before any attempt to load the module is made (using, for instance, a preload module).

When using ESM, if there is a chance that the code may be run on a build of Node.js where crypto support is not enabled, consider using the import() function instead of the lexical import keyword:

MJS

TLS/SSL concepts

TLS/SSL is a set of protocols that rely on a public key infrastructure (PKI) to enable secure communication between a client and a server. For most common cases, each server must have a private key.

Private keys can be generated in multiple ways. The example below illustrates use of the OpenSSL command-line interface to generate a 2048-bit RSA private key:

BASH

With TLS/SSL, all servers (and some clients) must have a certificate. Certificates are public keys that correspond to a private key, and that are digitally signed either by a Certificate Authority or by the owner of the private key (such certificates are referred to as "self-signed"). The first step to obtaining a certificate is to create a Certificate Signing Request (CSR) file.

The OpenSSL command-line interface can be used to generate a CSR for a private key:

BASH

Once the CSR file is generated, it can either be sent to a Certificate Authority for signing or used to generate a self-signed certificate.

Creating a self-signed certificate using the OpenSSL command-line interface is illustrated in the example below:

BASH

Once the certificate is generated, it can be used to generate a .pfx or .p12 file:

BASH

Where:

  • in: is the signed certificate
  • inkey: is the associated private key
  • certfile: is a concatenation of all Certificate Authority (CA) certs into a single file, e.g. cat ca1-cert.pem ca2-cert.pem > ca-cert.pem

Perfect forward secrecy

The term forward secrecy or perfect forward secrecy describes a feature of key-agreement (i.e., key-exchange) methods. That is, the server and client keys are used to negotiate new temporary keys that are used specifically and only for the current communication session. Practically, this means that even if the server's private key is compromised, communication can only be decrypted by eavesdroppers if the attacker manages to obtain the key-pair specifically generated for the session.

Perfect forward secrecy is achieved by randomly generating a key pair for key-agreement on every TLS/SSL handshake (in contrast to using the same key for all sessions). Methods implementing this technique are called "ephemeral".

Currently two methods are commonly used to achieve perfect forward secrecy (note the character "E" appended to the traditional abbreviations):

  • DHE: An ephemeral version of the Diffie-Hellman key-agreement protocol.
  • ECDHE: An ephemeral version of the Elliptic Curve Diffie-Hellman key-agreement protocol.

To use perfect forward secrecy using DHE with the node:tls module, it is required to generate Diffie-Hellman parameters and specify them with the dhparam option to tls.createSecureContext(). The following illustrates the use of the OpenSSL command-line interface to generate such parameters:

BASH

If using perfect forward secrecy using ECDHE, Diffie-Hellman parameters are not required and a default ECDHE curve will be used. The ecdhCurve property can be used when creating a TLS Server to specify the list of names of supported curves to use, see tls.createServer() for more info.

Perfect forward secrecy was optional up to TLSv1.2, but it is not optional for TLSv1.3, because all TLSv1.3 cipher suites use ECDHE.

ALPN and SNI

ALPN (Application-Layer Protocol Negotiation Extension) and SNI (Server Name Indication) are TLS handshake extensions:

  • ALPN: Allows the use of one TLS server for multiple protocols (HTTP, HTTP/2)
  • SNI: Allows the use of one TLS server for multiple hostnames with different certificates.

Pre-shared keys

TLS-PSK support is available as an alternative to normal certificate-based authentication. It uses a pre-shared key instead of certificates to authenticate a TLS connection, providing mutual authentication. TLS-PSK and public key infrastructure are not mutually exclusive. Clients and servers can accommodate both, choosing either of them during the normal cipher negotiation step.

TLS-PSK is only a good choice where means exist to securely share a key with every connecting machine, so it does not replace the public key infrastructure (PKI) for the majority of TLS uses. The TLS-PSK implementation in OpenSSL has seen many security flaws in recent years, mostly because it is used only by a minority of applications. Please consider all alternative solutions before switching to PSK ciphers. Upon generating PSK it is of critical importance to use sufficient entropy as discussed in RFC 4086. Deriving a shared secret from a password or other low-entropy sources is not secure.

PSK ciphers are disabled by default, and using TLS-PSK thus requires explicitly specifying a cipher suite with the ciphers option. The list of available ciphers can be retrieved via openssl ciphers -v 'PSK'. All TLS 1.3 ciphers are eligible for PSK but currently only those that use SHA256 digest are supported they can be retrieved via openssl ciphers -v -s -tls1_3 -psk.

According to the RFC 4279, PSK identities up to 128 bytes in length and PSKs up to 64 bytes in length must be supported. As of OpenSSL 1.1.0 maximum identity size is 128 bytes, and maximum PSK length is 256 bytes.

The current implementation doesn't support asynchronous PSK callbacks due to the limitations of the underlying OpenSSL API.

Client-initiated renegotiation attack mitigation

The TLS protocol allows clients to renegotiate certain aspects of the TLS session. Unfortunately, session renegotiation requires a disproportionate amount of server-side resources, making it a potential vector for denial-of-service attacks.

To mitigate the risk, renegotiation is limited to three times every ten minutes. An 'error' event is emitted on the tls.TLSSocket instance when this threshold is exceeded. The limits are configurable:

  • tls.CLIENT_RENEG_LIMIT number Specifies the number of renegotiation requests. Default: 3.
  • tls.CLIENT_RENEG_WINDOW number Specifies the time renegotiation window in seconds. Default: 600 (10 minutes).

The default renegotiation limits should not be modified without a full understanding of the implications and risks.

TLSv1.3 does not support renegotiation.

Session resumption

Establishing a TLS session can be relatively slow. The process can be sped up by saving and later reusing the session state. There are several mechanisms to do so, discussed here from oldest to newest (and preferred).

Session identifiers

Servers generate a unique ID for new connections and send it to the client. Clients and servers save the session state. When reconnecting, clients send the ID of their saved session state and if the server also has the state for that ID, it can agree to use it. Otherwise, the server will create a new session. See RFC 2246 for more information, page 23 and 30.

Resumption using session identifiers is supported by most web browsers when making HTTPS requests.

For Node.js, clients wait for the 'session' event to get the session data, and provide the data to the session option of a subsequent tls.connect() to reuse the session. Servers must implement handlers for the 'newSession' and 'resumeSession' events to save and restore the session data using the session ID as the lookup key to reuse sessions. To reuse sessions across load balancers or cluster workers, servers must use a shared session cache (such as Redis) in their session handlers.

Session tickets

The servers encrypt the entire session state and send it to the client as a "ticket". When reconnecting, the state is sent to the server in the initial connection. This mechanism avoids the need for a server-side session cache. If the server doesn't use the ticket, for any reason (failure to decrypt it, it's too old, etc.), it will create a new session and send a new ticket. See RFC 5077 for more information.

Resumption using session tickets is becoming commonly supported by many web browsers when making HTTPS requests.

For Node.js, clients use the same APIs for resumption with session identifiers as for resumption with session tickets. For debugging, if tls.TLSSocket.getTLSTicket() returns a value, the session data contains a ticket, otherwise it contains client-side session state.

With TLSv1.3, be aware that multiple tickets may be sent by the server, resulting in multiple 'session' events, see 'session' for more information.

Single process servers need no specific implementation to use session tickets. To use session tickets across server restarts or load balancers, servers must all have the same ticket keys. There are three 16-byte keys internally, but the tls API exposes them as a single 48-byte buffer for convenience.

It's possible to get the ticket keys by calling server.getTicketKeys() on one server instance and then distribute them, but it is more reasonable to securely generate 48 bytes of secure random data and set them with the ticketKeys option of tls.createServer(). The keys should be regularly regenerated and server's keys can be reset with server.setTicketKeys().

Session ticket keys are cryptographic keys, and they must be stored securely. With TLS 1.2 and below, if they are compromised all sessions that used tickets encrypted with them can be decrypted. They should not be stored on disk, and they should be regenerated regularly.

If clients advertise support for tickets, the server will send them. The server can disable tickets by supplying require('node:constants').SSL_OP_NO_TICKET in secureOptions.

Both session identifiers and session tickets timeout, causing the server to create new sessions. The timeout can be configured with the sessionTimeout option of tls.createServer().

For all the mechanisms, when resumption fails, servers will create new sessions. Since failing to resume the session does not cause TLS/HTTPS connection failures, it is easy to not notice unnecessarily poor TLS performance. The OpenSSL CLI can be used to verify that servers are resuming sessions. Use the -reconnect option to openssl s_client, for example:

BASH

Read through the debug output. The first connection should say "New", for example:

TEXT

Subsequent connections should say "Reused", for example:

TEXT

Modifying the default TLS cipher suite

Node.js is built with a default suite of enabled and disabled TLS ciphers. This default cipher list can be configured when building Node.js to allow distributions to provide their own default list.

The following command can be used to show the default cipher suite:

BASH

This default can be replaced entirely using the --tls-cipher-list command-line switch (directly, or via the NODE_OPTIONS environment variable). For instance, the following makes ECDHE-RSA-AES128-GCM-SHA256:!RC4 the default TLS cipher suite:

BASH

The default can also be replaced on a per client or server basis using the ciphers option from tls.createSecureContext(), which is also available in tls.createServer(), tls.connect(), and when creating new tls.TLSSockets.

The ciphers list can contain a mixture of TLSv1.3 cipher suite names, the ones that start with 'TLS_', and specifications for TLSv1.2 and below cipher suites. The TLSv1.2 ciphers support a legacy specification format, consult the OpenSSL cipher list format documentation for details, but those specifications do not apply to TLSv1.3 ciphers. The TLSv1.3 suites can only be enabled by including their full name in the cipher list. They cannot, for example, be enabled or disabled by using the legacy TLSv1.2 'EECDH' or '!EECDH' specification.

Despite the relative order of TLSv1.3 and TLSv1.2 cipher suites, the TLSv1.3 protocol is significantly more secure than TLSv1.2, and will always be chosen over TLSv1.2 if the handshake indicates it is supported, and if any TLSv1.3 cipher suites are enabled.

The default cipher suite included within Node.js has been carefully selected to reflect current security best practices and risk mitigation. Changing the default cipher suite can have a significant impact on the security of an application. The --tls-cipher-list switch and ciphers option should by used only if absolutely necessary.

The default cipher suite prefers GCM ciphers for Chrome's 'modern cryptography' setting and also prefers ECDHE and DHE ciphers for perfect forward secrecy, while offering some backward compatibility.

Old clients that rely on insecure and deprecated RC4 or DES-based ciphers (like Internet Explorer 6) cannot complete the handshaking process with the default configuration. If these clients must be supported, the TLS recommendations may offer a compatible cipher suite. For more details on the format, see the OpenSSL cipher list format documentation.

There are only five TLSv1.3 cipher suites:

  • 'TLS_AES_256_GCM_SHA384'
  • 'TLS_CHACHA20_POLY1305_SHA256'
  • 'TLS_AES_128_GCM_SHA256'
  • 'TLS_AES_128_CCM_SHA256'
  • 'TLS_AES_128_CCM_8_SHA256'

The first three are enabled by default. The two CCM-based suites are supported by TLSv1.3 because they may be more performant on constrained systems, but they are not enabled by default since they offer less security.

X509 certificate error codes

Multiple functions can fail due to certificate errors that are reported by OpenSSL. In such a case, the function provides an Error via its callback that has the property code which can take one of the following values:

  • 'UNABLE_TO_GET_ISSUER_CERT': Unable to get issuer certificate.
  • 'UNABLE_TO_GET_CRL': Unable to get certificate CRL.
  • 'UNABLE_TO_DECRYPT_CERT_SIGNATURE': Unable to decrypt certificate's signature.
  • 'UNABLE_TO_DECRYPT_CRL_SIGNATURE': Unable to decrypt CRL's signature.
  • 'UNABLE_TO_DECODE_ISSUER_PUBLIC_KEY': Unable to decode issuer public key.
  • 'CERT_SIGNATURE_FAILURE': Certificate signature failure.
  • 'CRL_SIGNATURE_FAILURE': CRL signature failure.
  • 'CERT_NOT_YET_VALID': Certificate is not yet valid.
  • 'CERT_HAS_EXPIRED': Certificate has expired.
  • 'CRL_NOT_YET_VALID': CRL is not yet valid.
  • 'CRL_HAS_EXPIRED': CRL has expired.
  • 'ERROR_IN_CERT_NOT_BEFORE_FIELD': Format error in certificate's notBefore field.
  • 'ERROR_IN_CERT_NOT_AFTER_FIELD': Format error in certificate's notAfter field.
  • 'ERROR_IN_CRL_LAST_UPDATE_FIELD': Format error in CRL's lastUpdate field.
  • 'ERROR_IN_CRL_NEXT_UPDATE_FIELD': Format error in CRL's nextUpdate field.
  • 'OUT_OF_MEM': Out of memory.
  • 'DEPTH_ZERO_SELF_SIGNED_CERT': Self signed certificate.
  • 'SELF_SIGNED_CERT_IN_CHAIN': Self signed certificate in certificate chain.
  • 'UNABLE_TO_GET_ISSUER_CERT_LOCALLY': Unable to get local issuer certificate.
  • 'UNABLE_TO_VERIFY_LEAF_SIGNATURE': Unable to verify the first certificate.
  • 'CERT_CHAIN_TOO_LONG': Certificate chain too long.
  • 'CERT_REVOKED': Certificate revoked.
  • 'INVALID_CA': Invalid CA certificate.
  • 'PATH_LENGTH_EXCEEDED': Path length constraint exceeded.
  • 'INVALID_PURPOSE': Unsupported certificate purpose.
  • 'CERT_UNTRUSTED': Certificate not trusted.
  • 'CERT_REJECTED': Certificate rejected.
  • 'HOSTNAME_MISMATCH': Hostname mismatch.

C tls.CryptoStream

自 v0.11.3 版本开始弃用

稳定级别:0 - Deprecated: Use `tls.TLSSocket` instead.

The tls.CryptoStream class represents a stream of encrypted data. This class is deprecated and should no longer be used.

M cryptoStream.bytesWritten

自 v0.11.3 版本开始弃用

The cryptoStream.bytesWritten property returns the total number of bytes written to the underlying socket including the bytes required for the implementation of the TLS protocol.

C tls.SecurePair

自 v0.11.3 版本开始弃用

稳定级别:0 - Deprecated: Use `tls.TLSSocket` instead.

Returned by tls.createSecurePair().

E 'secure'

自 v0.11.3 版本开始弃用

The 'secure' event is emitted by the SecurePair object once a secure connection has been established.

As with checking for the server 'secureConnection' event, pair.cleartext.authorized should be inspected to confirm whether the certificate used is properly authorized.

C tls.Server

自 v0.3.2 版本开始新增

Accepts encrypted connections using TLS or SSL.

E 'connection'

自 v0.3.2 版本开始新增

This event is emitted when a new TCP stream is established, before the TLS handshake begins. socket is typically an object of type net.Socket but will not receive events unlike the socket created from the net.Server 'connection' event. Usually users will not want to access this event.

This event can also be explicitly emitted by users to inject connections into the TLS server. In that case, any Duplex stream can be passed.

E 'keylog'

自 v12.3.0, v10.20.0 版本开始新增

  • line Buffer Line of ASCII text, in NSS SSLKEYLOGFILE format.
  • tlsSocket tls.TLSSocket The tls.TLSSocket instance on which it was generated.

The keylog event is emitted when key material is generated or received by a connection to this server (typically before handshake has completed, but not necessarily). This keying material can be stored for debugging, as it allows captured TLS traffic to be decrypted. It may be emitted multiple times for each socket.

A typical use case is to append received lines to a common text file, which is later used by software (such as Wireshark) to decrypt the traffic:

JS

E 'newSession'

历史
版本历史变更
v0.11.12The `callback` argument is now supported.
v0.9.2自 v0.9.2 版本开始新增

The 'newSession' event is emitted upon creation of a new TLS session. This may be used to store sessions in external storage. The data should be provided to the 'resumeSession' callback.

The listener callback is passed three arguments when called:

  • sessionId Buffer The TLS session identifier
  • sessionData Buffer The TLS session data
  • callback Function A callback function taking no arguments that must be invoked in order for data to be sent or received over the secure connection.

Listening for this event will have an effect only on connections established after the addition of the event listener.

E 'OCSPRequest'

自 v0.11.13 版本开始新增

The 'OCSPRequest' event is emitted when the client sends a certificate status request. The listener callback is passed three arguments when called:

  • certificate Buffer The server certificate
  • issuer Buffer The issuer's certificate
  • callback Function A callback function that must be invoked to provide the results of the OCSP request.

The server's current certificate can be parsed to obtain the OCSP URL and certificate ID; after obtaining an OCSP response, callback(null, resp) is then invoked, where resp is a Buffer instance containing the OCSP response. Both certificate and issuer are Buffer DER-representations of the primary and issuer's certificates. These can be used to obtain the OCSP certificate ID and OCSP endpoint URL.

Alternatively, callback(null, null) may be called, indicating that there was no OCSP response.

Calling callback(err) will result in a socket.destroy(err) call.

The typical flow of an OCSP request is as follows:

  1. Client connects to the server and sends an 'OCSPRequest' (via the status info extension in ClientHello).
  2. Server receives the request and emits the 'OCSPRequest' event, calling the listener if registered.
  3. Server extracts the OCSP URL from either the certificate or issuer and performs an OCSP request to the CA.
  4. Server receives 'OCSPResponse' from the CA and sends it back to the client via the callback argument
  5. Client validates the response and either destroys the socket or performs a handshake.

The issuer can be null if the certificate is either self-signed or the issuer is not in the root certificates list. (An issuer may be provided via the ca option when establishing the TLS connection.)

Listening for this event will have an effect only on connections established after the addition of the event listener.

An npm module like asn1.js may be used to parse the certificates.

E 'resumeSession'

自 v0.9.2 版本开始新增

The 'resumeSession' event is emitted when the client requests to resume a previous TLS session. The listener callback is passed two arguments when called:

  • sessionId Buffer The TLS session identifier
  • callback Function A callback function to be called when the prior session has been recovered: callback([err[, sessionData]])

The event listener should perform a lookup in external storage for the sessionData saved by the 'newSession' event handler using the given sessionId. If found, call callback(null, sessionData) to resume the session. If not found, the session cannot be resumed. callback() must be called without sessionData so that the handshake can continue and a new session can be created. It is possible to call callback(err) to terminate the incoming connection and destroy the socket.

Listening for this event will have an effect only on connections established after the addition of the event listener.

The following illustrates resuming a TLS session:

JS

E 'secureConnection'

自 v0.3.2 版本开始新增

The 'secureConnection' event is emitted after the handshaking process for a new connection has successfully completed. The listener callback is passed a single argument when called:

The tlsSocket.authorized property is a boolean indicating whether the client has been verified by one of the supplied Certificate Authorities for the server. If tlsSocket.authorized is false, then socket.authorizationError is set to describe how authorization failed. Depending on the settings of the TLS server, unauthorized connections may still be accepted.

The tlsSocket.alpnProtocol property is a string that contains the selected ALPN protocol. When ALPN has no selected protocol because the client or the server did not send an ALPN extension, tlsSocket.alpnProtocol equals false.

The tlsSocket.servername property is a string containing the server name requested via SNI.

E 'tlsClientError'

自 v6.0.0 版本开始新增

The 'tlsClientError' event is emitted when an error occurs before a secure connection is established. The listener callback is passed two arguments when called:

  • exception Error The Error object describing the error
  • tlsSocket tls.TLSSocket The tls.TLSSocket instance from which the error originated.

M server.addContext(hostname, context)

自 v0.5.3 版本开始新增

  • hostname string A SNI host name or wildcard (e.g. '*')
  • context Object An object containing any of the possible properties from the tls.createSecureContext() options arguments (e.g. key, cert, ca, etc).

The server.addContext() method adds a secure context that will be used if the client request's SNI name matches the supplied hostname (or wildcard).

When there are multiple matching contexts, the most recently added one is used.

M server.address()

自 v0.6.0 版本开始新增

Returns the bound address, the address family name, and port of the server as reported by the operating system. See net.Server.address() for more information.

M server.close([callback])

自 v0.3.2 版本开始新增

  • callback Function A listener callback that will be registered to listen for the server instance's 'close' event.
  • Returns: tls.Server

The server.close() method stops the server from accepting new connections.

This function operates asynchronously. The 'close' event will be emitted when the server has no more open connections.

M server.getTicketKeys()

自 v3.0.0 版本开始新增

  • Returns: Buffer A 48-byte buffer containing the session ticket keys.

Returns the session ticket keys.

See Session Resumption for more information.

M server.listen()

Starts the server listening for encrypted connections. This method is identical to server.listen() from net.Server.

M server.setSecureContext(options)

自 v11.0.0 版本开始新增

The server.setSecureContext() method replaces the secure context of an existing server. Existing connections to the server are not interrupted.

M server.setTicketKeys(keys)

自 v3.0.0 版本开始新增

Sets the session ticket keys.

Changes to the ticket keys are effective only for future server connections. Existing or currently pending server connections will use the previous keys.

See Session Resumption for more information.

C tls.TLSSocket

自 v0.11.4 版本开始新增

Performs transparent encryption of written data and all required TLS negotiation.

Instances of tls.TLSSocket implement the duplex Stream interface.

Methods that return TLS connection metadata (e.g. tls.TLSSocket.getPeerCertificate()) will only return data while the connection is open.

M new tls.TLSSocket(socket[, options])

历史
版本历史变更
v12.2.0The `enableTrace` option is now supported.
v5.0.0ALPN options are supported now.
v0.11.4自 v0.11.4 版本开始新增
  • socket net.Socket | stream.Duplex On the server side, any Duplex stream. On the client side, any instance of net.Socket (for generic Duplex stream support on the client side, tls.connect() must be used).
  • options Object
    • enableTrace: See tls.createServer()
    • isServer: The SSL/TLS protocol is asymmetrical, TLSSockets must know if they are to behave as a server or a client. If true the TLS socket will be instantiated as a server. Default: false.
    • server net.Server A net.Server instance.
    • requestCert: Whether to authenticate the remote peer by requesting a certificate. Clients always request a server certificate. Servers (isServer is true) may set requestCert to true to request a client certificate.
    • rejectUnauthorized: See tls.createServer()
    • ALPNProtocols: See tls.createServer()
    • SNICallback: See tls.createServer()
    • session Buffer A Buffer instance containing a TLS session.
    • requestOCSP boolean If true, specifies that the OCSP status request extension will be added to the client hello and an 'OCSPResponse' event will be emitted on the socket before establishing a secure communication
    • secureContext: TLS context object created with tls.createSecureContext(). If a secureContext is not provided, one will be created by passing the entire options object to tls.createSecureContext().
    • ...: tls.createSecureContext() options that are used if the secureContext option is missing. Otherwise, they are ignored.

Construct a new tls.TLSSocket object from an existing TCP socket.

E 'keylog'

自 v12.3.0, v10.20.0 版本开始新增

  • line Buffer Line of ASCII text, in NSS SSLKEYLOGFILE format.

The keylog event is emitted on a tls.TLSSocket when key material is generated or received by the socket. This keying material can be stored for debugging, as it allows captured TLS traffic to be decrypted. It may be emitted multiple times, before or after the handshake completes.

A typical use case is to append received lines to a common text file, which is later used by software (such as Wireshark) to decrypt the traffic:

JS

E 'OCSPResponse'

自 v0.11.13 版本开始新增

The 'OCSPResponse' event is emitted if the requestOCSP option was set when the tls.TLSSocket was created and an OCSP response has been received. The listener callback is passed a single argument when called:

  • response Buffer The server's OCSP response

Typically, the response is a digitally signed object from the server's CA that contains information about server's certificate revocation status.

E 'secureConnect'

自 v0.11.4 版本开始新增

The 'secureConnect' event is emitted after the handshaking process for a new connection has successfully completed. The listener callback will be called regardless of whether or not the server's certificate has been authorized. It is the client's responsibility to check the tlsSocket.authorized property to determine if the server certificate was signed by one of the specified CAs. If tlsSocket.authorized === false, then the error can be found by examining the tlsSocket.authorizationError property. If ALPN was used, the tlsSocket.alpnProtocol property can be checked to determine the negotiated protocol.

The 'secureConnect' event is not emitted when a tls.TLSSocket is created using the new tls.TLSSocket() constructor.

E 'session'

自 v11.10.0 版本开始新增

The 'session' event is emitted on a client tls.TLSSocket when a new session or TLS ticket is available. This may or may not be before the handshake is complete, depending on the TLS protocol version that was negotiated. The event is not emitted on the server, or if a new session was not created, for example, when the connection was resumed. For some TLS protocol versions the event may be emitted multiple times, in which case all the sessions can be used for resumption.

On the client, the session can be provided to the session option of tls.connect() to resume the connection.

See Session Resumption for more information.

For TLSv1.2 and below, tls.TLSSocket.getSession() can be called once the handshake is complete. For TLSv1.3, only ticket-based resumption is allowed by the protocol, multiple tickets are sent, and the tickets aren't sent until after the handshake completes. So it is necessary to wait for the 'session' event to get a resumable session. Applications should use the 'session' event instead of getSession() to ensure they will work for all TLS versions. Applications that only expect to get or use one session should listen for this event only once:

JS

M tlsSocket.address()

历史
版本历史变更
v18.4.0The `family` property now returns a string instead of a number.
v18.0.0The `family` property now returns a number instead of a string.
v0.11.4自 v0.11.4 版本开始新增

Returns the bound address, the address family name, and port of the underlying socket as reported by the operating system: { port: 12346, family: 'IPv4', address: '127.0.0.1' }.

M tlsSocket.authorizationError

自 v0.11.4 版本开始新增

Returns the reason why the peer's certificate was not been verified. This property is set only when tlsSocket.authorized === false.

M tlsSocket.authorized

自 v0.11.4 版本开始新增

This property is true if the peer certificate was signed by one of the CAs specified when creating the tls.TLSSocket instance, otherwise false.

M tlsSocket.disableRenegotiation()

自 v8.4.0 版本开始新增

Disables TLS renegotiation for this TLSSocket instance. Once called, attempts to renegotiate will trigger an 'error' event on the TLSSocket.

M tlsSocket.enableTrace()

自 v12.2.0 版本开始新增

When enabled, TLS packet trace information is written to stderr. This can be used to debug TLS connection problems.

The format of the output is identical to the output of openssl s_client -trace or openssl s_server -trace. While it is produced by OpenSSL's SSL_trace() function, the format is undocumented, can change without notice, and should not be relied on.

M tlsSocket.encrypted

自 v0.11.4 版本开始新增

Always returns true. This may be used to distinguish TLS sockets from regular net.Socket instances.

M tlsSocket.exportKeyingMaterial(length, label[, context])

自 v13.10.0, v12.17.0 版本开始新增

  • length number number of bytes to retrieve from keying material

  • label string an application specific label, typically this will be a value from the IANA Exporter Label Registry.

  • context Buffer Optionally provide a context.

  • Returns: Buffer requested bytes of the keying material

Keying material is used for validations to prevent different kind of attacks in network protocols, for example in the specifications of IEEE 802.1X.

Example

JS

See the OpenSSL SSL_export_keying_material documentation for more information.

M tlsSocket.getCertificate()

自 v11.2.0 版本开始新增

Returns an object representing the local certificate. The returned object has some properties corresponding to the fields of the certificate.

See tls.TLSSocket.getPeerCertificate() for an example of the certificate structure.

If there is no local certificate, an empty object will be returned. If the socket has been destroyed, null will be returned.

M tlsSocket.getCipher()

历史
版本历史变更
v13.4.0, v12.16.0Return the IETF cipher name as `standardName`.
v12.0.0Return the minimum cipher version, instead of a fixed string (`'TLSv1/SSLv3'`).
v0.11.4自 v0.11.4 版本开始新增
  • Returns: Object
    • name string OpenSSL name for the cipher suite.
    • standardName string IETF name for the cipher suite.
    • version string The minimum TLS protocol version supported by this cipher suite. For the actual negotiated protocol, see tls.TLSSocket.getProtocol().

Returns an object containing information on the negotiated cipher suite.

For example, a TLSv1.2 protocol with AES256-SHA cipher:

JSON

See SSL_CIPHER_get_name for more information.

M tlsSocket.getEphemeralKeyInfo()

自 v5.0.0 版本开始新增

Returns an object representing the type, name, and size of parameter of an ephemeral key exchange in perfect forward secrecy on a client connection. It returns an empty object when the key exchange is not ephemeral. As this is only supported on a client socket; null is returned if called on a server socket. The supported types are 'DH' and 'ECDH'. The name property is available only when type is 'ECDH'.

For example: { type: 'ECDH', name: 'prime256v1', size: 256 }.

M tlsSocket.getFinished()

自 v9.9.0 版本开始新增

  • Returns: Buffer | undefined The latest Finished message that has been sent to the socket as part of a SSL/TLS handshake, or undefined if no Finished message has been sent yet.

As the Finished messages are message digests of the complete handshake (with a total of 192 bits for TLS 1.0 and more for SSL 3.0), they can be used for external authentication procedures when the authentication provided by SSL/TLS is not desired or is not enough.

Corresponds to the SSL_get_finished routine in OpenSSL and may be used to implement the tls-unique channel binding from RFC 5929.

M tlsSocket.getPeerCertificate([detailed])

自 v0.11.4 版本开始新增

  • detailed boolean Include the full certificate chain if true, otherwise include just the peer's certificate.
  • Returns: Object A certificate object.

Returns an object representing the peer's certificate. If the peer does not provide a certificate, an empty object will be returned. If the socket has been destroyed, null will be returned.

If the full certificate chain was requested, each certificate will include an issuerCertificate property containing an object representing its issuer's certificate.

Certificate object

A certificate object has properties corresponding to the fields of the certificate.

  • ca boolean true if a Certificate Authority (CA), false otherwise.
  • raw Buffer The DER encoded X.509 certificate data.
  • subject Object The certificate subject, described in terms of Country (C), StateOrProvince (ST), Locality (L), Organization (O), OrganizationalUnit (OU), and CommonName (CN). The CommonName is typically a DNS name with TLS certificates. Example: {C: 'UK', ST: 'BC', L: 'Metro', O: 'Node Fans', OU: 'Docs', CN: 'example.com'}.
  • issuer Object The certificate issuer, described in the same terms as the subject.
  • valid_from string The date-time the certificate is valid from.
  • valid_to string The date-time the certificate is valid to.
  • serialNumber string The certificate serial number, as a hex string. Example: 'B9B0D332A1AA5635'.
  • fingerprint string The SHA-1 digest of the DER encoded certificate. It is returned as a : separated hexadecimal string. Example: '2A:7A:C2:DD:...'.
  • fingerprint256 string The SHA-256 digest of the DER encoded certificate. It is returned as a : separated hexadecimal string. Example: '2A:7A:C2:DD:...'.
  • fingerprint512 string The SHA-512 digest of the DER encoded certificate. It is returned as a : separated hexadecimal string. Example: '2A:7A:C2:DD:...'.
  • ext_key_usage Array (Optional) The extended key usage, a set of OIDs.
  • subjectaltname string (Optional) A string containing concatenated names for the subject, an alternative to the subject names.
  • infoAccess Array (Optional) An array describing the AuthorityInfoAccess, used with OCSP.
  • issuerCertificate Object (Optional) The issuer certificate object. For self-signed certificates, this may be a circular reference.

The certificate may contain information about the public key, depending on the key type.

For RSA keys, the following properties may be defined:

  • bits number The RSA bit size. Example: 1024.
  • exponent string The RSA exponent, as a string in hexadecimal number notation. Example: '0x010001'.
  • modulus string The RSA modulus, as a hexadecimal string. Example: 'B56CE45CB7...'.
  • pubkey Buffer The public key.

For EC keys, the following properties may be defined:

  • pubkey Buffer The public key.
  • bits number The key size in bits. Example: 256.
  • asn1Curve string (Optional) The ASN.1 name of the OID of the elliptic curve. Well-known curves are identified by an OID. While it is unusual, it is possible that the curve is identified by its mathematical properties, in which case it will not have an OID. Example: 'prime256v1'.
  • nistCurve string (Optional) The NIST name for the elliptic curve, if it has one (not all well-known curves have been assigned names by NIST). Example: 'P-256'.

Example certificate:

JS

M tlsSocket.getPeerFinished()

自 v9.9.0 版本开始新增

  • Returns: Buffer | undefined The latest Finished message that is expected or has actually been received from the socket as part of a SSL/TLS handshake, or undefined if there is no Finished message so far.

As the Finished messages are message digests of the complete handshake (with a total of 192 bits for TLS 1.0 and more for SSL 3.0), they can be used for external authentication procedures when the authentication provided by SSL/TLS is not desired or is not enough.

Corresponds to the SSL_get_peer_finished routine in OpenSSL and may be used to implement the tls-unique channel binding from RFC 5929.

M tlsSocket.getPeerX509Certificate()

自 v15.9.0 版本开始新增

Returns the peer certificate as an X509Certificate object.

If there is no peer certificate, or the socket has been destroyed, undefined will be returned.

M tlsSocket.getProtocol()

自 v5.7.0 版本开始新增

Returns a string containing the negotiated SSL/TLS protocol version of the current connection. The value 'unknown' will be returned for connected sockets that have not completed the handshaking process. The value null will be returned for server sockets or disconnected client sockets.

Protocol versions are:

  • 'SSLv3'
  • 'TLSv1'
  • 'TLSv1.1'
  • 'TLSv1.2'
  • 'TLSv1.3'

See the OpenSSL SSL_get_version documentation for more information.

M tlsSocket.getSession()

自 v0.11.4 版本开始新增

Returns the TLS session data or undefined if no session was negotiated. On the client, the data can be provided to the session option of tls.connect() to resume the connection. On the server, it may be useful for debugging.

See Session Resumption for more information.

Note: getSession() works only for TLSv1.2 and below. For TLSv1.3, applications must use the 'session' event (it also works for TLSv1.2 and below).

M tlsSocket.getSharedSigalgs()

自 v12.11.0 版本开始新增

  • Returns: Array List of signature algorithms shared between the server and the client in the order of decreasing preference.

See SSL_get_shared_sigalgs for more information.

M tlsSocket.getTLSTicket()

自 v0.11.4 版本开始新增

For a client, returns the TLS session ticket if one is available, or undefined. For a server, always returns undefined.

It may be useful for debugging.

See Session Resumption for more information.

M tlsSocket.getX509Certificate()

自 v15.9.0 版本开始新增

Returns the local certificate as an X509Certificate object.

If there is no local certificate, or the socket has been destroyed, undefined will be returned.

M tlsSocket.isSessionReused()

自 v0.5.6 版本开始新增

  • Returns: boolean true if the session was reused, false otherwise.

See Session Resumption for more information.

M tlsSocket.localAddress

自 v0.11.4 版本开始新增

Returns the string representation of the local IP address.

M tlsSocket.localPort

自 v0.11.4 版本开始新增

Returns the numeric representation of the local port.

M tlsSocket.remoteAddress

自 v0.11.4 版本开始新增

Returns the string representation of the remote IP address. For example, '74.125.127.100' or '2001:4860:a005::68'.

M tlsSocket.remoteFamily

自 v0.11.4 版本开始新增

Returns the string representation of the remote IP family. 'IPv4' or 'IPv6'.

M tlsSocket.remotePort

自 v0.11.4 版本开始新增

Returns the numeric representation of the remote port. For example, 443.

M tlsSocket.renegotiate(options, callback)

历史
版本历史变更
v18.0.0Passing an invalid callback to the `callback` argument now throws `ERR_INVALID_ARG_TYPE` instead of `ERR_INVALID_CALLBACK`.
v0.11.8自 v0.11.8 版本开始新增
  • options Object

    • rejectUnauthorized boolean If not false, the server certificate is verified against the list of supplied CAs. An 'error' event is emitted if verification fails; err.code contains the OpenSSL error code. Default:true.
    • requestCert
  • callback Function If renegotiate() returned true, callback is attached once to the 'secure' event. If renegotiate() returned false, callback will be called in the next tick with an error, unless the tlsSocket has been destroyed, in which case callback will not be called at all.

  • Returns: boolean true if renegotiation was initiated, false otherwise.

The tlsSocket.renegotiate() method initiates a TLS renegotiation process. Upon completion, the callback function will be passed a single argument that is either an Error (if the request failed) or null.

This method can be used to request a peer's certificate after the secure connection has been established.

When running as the server, the socket will be destroyed with an error after handshakeTimeout timeout.

For TLSv1.3, renegotiation cannot be initiated, it is not supported by the protocol.

M tlsSocket.setMaxSendFragment(size)

自 v0.11.11 版本开始新增

  • size number The maximum TLS fragment size. The maximum value is 16384. Default: 16384.
  • Returns: boolean

The tlsSocket.setMaxSendFragment() method sets the maximum TLS fragment size. Returns true if setting the limit succeeded; false otherwise.

Smaller fragment sizes decrease the buffering latency on the client: larger fragments are buffered by the TLS layer until the entire fragment is received and its integrity is verified; large fragments can span multiple roundtrips and their processing can be delayed due to packet loss or reordering. However, smaller fragments add extra TLS framing bytes and CPU overhead, which may decrease overall server throughput.

M tls.checkServerIdentity(hostname, cert)

历史
版本历史变更
v17.3.1, v16.13.2, v14.18.3, v12.22.9Support for `uniformResourceIdentifier` subject alternative names has been disabled in response to CVE-2021-44531.
v0.8.4自 v0.8.4 版本开始新增

Verifies the certificate cert is issued to hostname.

Returns Error object, populating it with reason, host, and cert on failure. On success, returns undefined.

This function is intended to be used in combination with the checkServerIdentity option that can be passed to tls.connect() and as such operates on a certificate object. For other purposes, consider using x509.checkHost() instead.

This function can be overwritten by providing an alternative function as the options.checkServerIdentity option that is passed to tls.connect(). The overwriting function can call tls.checkServerIdentity() of course, to augment the checks done with additional verification.

This function is only called if the certificate passed all other checks, such as being issued by trusted CA (options.ca).

Earlier versions of Node.js incorrectly accepted certificates for a given hostname if a matching uniformResourceIdentifier subject alternative name was present (see CVE-2021-44531). Applications that wish to accept uniformResourceIdentifier subject alternative names can use a custom options.checkServerIdentity function that implements the desired behavior.

M tls.connect(options[, callback])

历史
版本历史变更
v15.1.0, v14.18.0Added `onread` option.
v14.1.0, v13.14.0The `highWaterMark` option is accepted now.
v13.6.0, v12.16.0The `pskCallback` option is now supported.
v12.9.0Support the `allowHalfOpen` option.
v12.4.0The `hints` option is now supported.
v12.2.0The `enableTrace` option is now supported.
v11.8.0, v10.16.0The `timeout` option is supported now.
v8.0.0The `lookup` option is supported now.
v8.0.0The `ALPNProtocols` option can be a `TypedArray` or `DataView` now.
v5.3.0, v4.7.0The `secureContext` option is supported now.
v5.0.0ALPN options are supported now.
v0.11.3自 v0.11.3 版本开始新增
  • options Object

    • enableTrace: See tls.createServer()

    • host string Host the client should connect to. Default: 'localhost'.

    • port number Port the client should connect to.

    • path string Creates Unix socket connection to path. If this option is specified, host and port are ignored.

    • socket stream.Duplex Establish secure connection on a given socket rather than creating a new socket. Typically, this is an instance of net.Socket, but any Duplex stream is allowed. If this option is specified, path, host, and port are ignored, except for certificate validation. Usually, a socket is already connected when passed to tls.connect(), but it can be connected later. Connection/disconnection/destruction of socket is the user's responsibility; calling tls.connect() will not cause net.connect() to be called.

    • allowHalfOpen boolean If set to false, then the socket will automatically end the writable side when the readable side ends. If the socket option is set, this option has no effect. See the allowHalfOpen option of net.Socket for details. Default: false.

    • rejectUnauthorized boolean If not false, the server certificate is verified against the list of supplied CAs. An 'error' event is emitted if verification fails; err.code contains the OpenSSL error code. Default: true.

    • pskCallback Function

      • hint: string optional message sent from the server to help client decide which identity to use during negotiation. Always null if TLS 1.3 is used.
      • Returns: Object in the form { psk: [TypedArray](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/TypedArray), identity: <string> } or null to stop the negotiation process. psk must be compatible with the selected cipher's digest. identity must use UTF-8 encoding.

      When negotiating TLS-PSK (pre-shared keys), this function is called with optional identity hint provided by the server or null in case of TLS 1.3 where hint was removed. It will be necessary to provide a custom tls.checkServerIdentity() for the connection as the default one will try to check host name/IP of the server against the certificate but that's not applicable for PSK because there won't be a certificate present. More information can be found in the RFC 4279.

    • ALPNProtocols: Buffer | TypedArray | DataView An array of strings, Buffers, TypedArrays, or DataViews, or a single Buffer, TypedArray, or DataView containing the supported ALPN protocols. Buffers should have the format [len][name][len][name]... e.g. '\x08http/1.1\x08http/1.0', where the len byte is the length of the next protocol name. Passing an array is usually much simpler, e.g. ['http/1.1', 'http/1.0']. Protocols earlier in the list have higher preference than those later.

    • servername: string Server name for the SNI (Server Name Indication) TLS extension. It is the name of the host being connected to, and must be a host name, and not an IP address. It can be used by a multi-homed server to choose the correct certificate to present to the client, see the SNICallback option to tls.createServer().

    • checkServerIdentity(servername, cert) Function A callback function to be used (instead of the builtin tls.checkServerIdentity() function) when checking the server's host name (or the provided servername when explicitly set) against the certificate. This should return an Error if verification fails. The method should return undefined if the servername and cert are verified.

    • session Buffer A Buffer instance, containing TLS session.

    • minDHSize number Minimum size of the DH parameter in bits to accept a TLS connection. When a server offers a DH parameter with a size less than minDHSize, the TLS connection is destroyed and an error is thrown. Default: 1024.

    • highWaterMark: number Consistent with the readable stream highWaterMark parameter. Default: 16 * 1024.

    • secureContext: TLS context object created with tls.createSecureContext(). If a secureContext is not provided, one will be created by passing the entire options object to tls.createSecureContext().

    • onread Object If the socket option is missing, incoming data is stored in a single buffer and passed to the supplied callback when data arrives on the socket, otherwise the option is ignored. See the onread option of net.Socket for details.

    • ...: tls.createSecureContext() options that are used if the secureContext option is missing, otherwise they are ignored.

    • ...: Any socket.connect() option not already listed.

  • callback Function

  • Returns: tls.TLSSocket

The callback function, if specified, will be added as a listener for the 'secureConnect' event.

tls.connect() returns a tls.TLSSocket object.

Unlike the https API, tls.connect() does not enable the SNI (Server Name Indication) extension by default, which may cause some servers to return an incorrect certificate or reject the connection altogether. To enable SNI, set the servername option in addition to host.

The following illustrates a client for the echo server example from tls.createServer():

JS

M tls.connect(path[, options][, callback])

自 v0.11.3 版本开始新增

Same as tls.connect() except that path can be provided as an argument instead of an option.

A path option, if specified, will take precedence over the path argument.

M tls.connect(port[, host][, options][, callback])

自 v0.11.3 版本开始新增

Same as tls.connect() except that port and host can be provided as arguments instead of options.

A port or host option, if specified, will take precedence over any port or host argument.

M tls.createSecureContext([options])

历史
版本历史变更
v12.12.0Added `privateKeyIdentifier` and `privateKeyEngine` options to get private key from an OpenSSL engine.
v12.11.0Added `sigalgs` option to override supported signature algorithms.
v12.0.0TLSv1.3 support added.
v11.5.0The `ca:` option now supports `BEGIN TRUSTED CERTIFICATE`.
v11.4.0, v10.16.0The `minVersion` and `maxVersion` can be used to restrict the allowed TLS protocol versions.
v10.0.0The `ecdhCurve` cannot be set to `false` anymore due to a change in OpenSSL.
v9.3.0The `options` parameter can now include `clientCertEngine`.
v9.0.0The `ecdhCurve` option can now be multiple `':'` separated curve names or `'auto'`.
v7.3.0If the `key` option is an array, individual entries do not need a `passphrase` property anymore. `Array` entries can also just be `string`s or `Buffer`s now.
v5.2.0The `ca` option can now be a single string containing multiple CA certificates.
v0.11.13自 v0.11.13 版本开始新增
  • options Object
    • ca string | Buffer Optionally override the trusted CA certificates. Default is to trust the well-known CAs curated by Mozilla. Mozilla's CAs are completely replaced when CAs are explicitly specified using this option. The value can be a string or Buffer, or an Array of strings and/or Buffers. Any string or Buffer can contain multiple PEM CAs concatenated together. The peer's certificate must be chainable to a CA trusted by the server for the connection to be authenticated. When using certificates that are not chainable to a well-known CA, the certificate's CA must be explicitly specified as a trusted or the connection will fail to authenticate. If the peer uses a certificate that doesn't match or chain to one of the default CAs, use the ca option to provide a CA certificate that the peer's certificate can match or chain to. For self-signed certificates, the certificate is its own CA, and must be provided. For PEM encoded certificates, supported types are "TRUSTED CERTIFICATE", "X509 CERTIFICATE", and "CERTIFICATE". See also tls.rootCertificates.
    • cert string | Buffer Cert chains in PEM format. One cert chain should be provided per private key. Each cert chain should consist of the PEM formatted certificate for a provided private key, followed by the PEM formatted intermediate certificates (if any), in order, and not including the root CA (the root CA must be pre-known to the peer, see ca). When providing multiple cert chains, they do not have to be in the same order as their private keys in key. If the intermediate certificates are not provided, the peer will not be able to validate the certificate, and the handshake will fail.
    • sigalgs string Colon-separated list of supported signature algorithms. The list can contain digest algorithms (SHA256, MD5 etc.), public key algorithms (RSA-PSS, ECDSA etc.), combination of both (e.g 'RSA+SHA384') or TLS v1.3 scheme names (e.g. rsa_pss_pss_sha512). See OpenSSL man pages for more info.
    • ciphers string Cipher suite specification, replacing the default. For more information, see Modifying the default TLS cipher suite. Permitted ciphers can be obtained via tls.getCiphers(). Cipher names must be uppercased in order for OpenSSL to accept them.
    • clientCertEngine string Name of an OpenSSL engine which can provide the client certificate.
    • crl string | Buffer PEM formatted CRLs (Certificate Revocation Lists).
    • dhparam string | Buffer Diffie-Hellman parameters, required for perfect forward secrecy. Use openssl dhparam to create the parameters. The key length must be greater than or equal to 1024 bits or else an error will be thrown. Although 1024 bits is permissible, use 2048 bits or larger for stronger security. If omitted or invalid, the parameters are silently discarded and DHE ciphers will not be available.
    • ecdhCurve string A string describing a named curve or a colon separated list of curve NIDs or names, for example P-521:P-384:P-256, to use for ECDH key agreement. Set to auto to select the curve automatically. Use crypto.getCurves() to obtain a list of available curve names. On recent releases, openssl ecparam -list_curves will also display the name and description of each available elliptic curve. Default: tls.DEFAULT_ECDH_CURVE.
    • honorCipherOrder boolean Attempt to use the server's cipher suite preferences instead of the client's. When true, causes SSL_OP_CIPHER_SERVER_PREFERENCE to be set in secureOptions, see OpenSSL Options for more information.
    • key string | Buffer Private keys in PEM format. PEM allows the option of private keys being encrypted. Encrypted keys will be decrypted with options.passphrase. Multiple keys using different algorithms can be provided either as an array of unencrypted key strings or buffers, or an array of objects in the form {pem: <string|buffer>[, passphrase: <string>]}. The object form can only occur in an array. object.passphrase is optional. Encrypted keys will be decrypted with object.passphrase if provided, or options.passphrase if it is not.
    • privateKeyEngine string Name of an OpenSSL engine to get private key from. Should be used together with privateKeyIdentifier.
    • privateKeyIdentifier string Identifier of a private key managed by an OpenSSL engine. Should be used together with privateKeyEngine. Should not be set together with key, because both options define a private key in different ways.
    • maxVersion string Optionally set the maximum TLS version to allow. One of 'TLSv1.3', 'TLSv1.2', 'TLSv1.1', or 'TLSv1'. Cannot be specified along with the secureProtocol option; use one or the other. Default: tls.DEFAULT_MAX_VERSION.
    • minVersion string Optionally set the minimum TLS version to allow. One of 'TLSv1.3', 'TLSv1.2', 'TLSv1.1', or 'TLSv1'. Cannot be specified along with the secureProtocol option; use one or the other. Avoid setting to less than TLSv1.2, but it may be required for interoperability. Default: tls.DEFAULT_MIN_VERSION.
    • passphrase string Shared passphrase used for a single private key and/or a PFX.
    • pfx string | Buffer PFX or PKCS12 encoded private key and certificate chain. pfx is an alternative to providing key and cert individually. PFX is usually encrypted, if it is, passphrase will be used to decrypt it. Multiple PFX can be provided either as an array of unencrypted PFX buffers, or an array of objects in the form {buf: <string|buffer>[, passphrase: <string>]}. The object form can only occur in an array. object.passphrase is optional. Encrypted PFX will be decrypted with object.passphrase if provided, or options.passphrase if it is not.
    • secureOptions number Optionally affect the OpenSSL protocol behavior, which is not usually necessary. This should be used carefully if at all! Value is a numeric bitmask of the SSL_OP_* options from OpenSSL Options.
    • secureProtocol string Legacy mechanism to select the TLS protocol version to use, it does not support independent control of the minimum and maximum version, and does not support limiting the protocol to TLSv1.3. Use minVersion and maxVersion instead. The possible values are listed as SSL_METHODS, use the function names as strings. For example, use 'TLSv1_1_method' to force TLS version 1.1, or 'TLS_method' to allow any TLS protocol version up to TLSv1.3. It is not recommended to use TLS versions less than 1.2, but it may be required for interoperability. Default: none, see minVersion.
    • sessionIdContext string Opaque identifier used by servers to ensure session state is not shared between applications. Unused by clients.
    • ticketKeys: Buffer 48-bytes of cryptographically strong pseudorandom data. See Session Resumption for more information.
    • sessionTimeout number The number of seconds after which a TLS session created by the server will no longer be resumable. See Session Resumption for more information. Default: 300.

tls.createServer() sets the default value of the honorCipherOrder option to true, other APIs that create secure contexts leave it unset.

tls.createServer() uses a 128 bit truncated SHA1 hash value generated from process.argv as the default value of the sessionIdContext option, other APIs that create secure contexts have no default value.

The tls.createSecureContext() method creates a SecureContext object. It is usable as an argument to several tls APIs, such as tls.createServer() and server.addContext(), but has no public methods.

A key is required for ciphers that use certificates. Either key or pfx can be used to provide it.

If the ca option is not given, then Node.js will default to using Mozilla's publicly trusted list of CAs.

M tls.createSecurePair([context][, isServer][, requestCert][, rejectUnauthorized][, options])

历史
版本历史变更
v5.0.0ALPN options are supported now.
v0.11.3自 v0.11.3 版本开始新增
稳定级别:0 - Deprecated: Use `tls.TLSSocket` instead.
  • context Object A secure context object as returned by tls.createSecureContext()
  • isServer boolean true to specify that this TLS connection should be opened as a server.
  • requestCert boolean true to specify whether a server should request a certificate from a connecting client. Only applies when isServer is true.
  • rejectUnauthorized boolean If not false a server automatically reject clients with invalid certificates. Only applies when isServer is true.
  • options

Creates a new secure pair object with two streams, one of which reads and writes the encrypted data and the other of which reads and writes the cleartext data. Generally, the encrypted stream is piped to/from an incoming encrypted data stream and the cleartext one is used as a replacement for the initial encrypted stream.

tls.createSecurePair() returns a tls.SecurePair object with cleartext and encrypted stream properties.

Using cleartext has the same API as tls.TLSSocket.

The tls.createSecurePair() method is now deprecated in favor of tls.TLSSocket(). For example, the code:

JS

can be replaced by:

JS

where secureSocket has the same API as pair.cleartext.

M tls.createServer([options][, secureConnectionListener])

历史
版本历史变更
v19.0.0If `ALPNProtocols` is set, incoming connections that send an ALPN extension with no supported protocols are terminated with a fatal `no_application_protocol` alert.
v12.3.0The `options` parameter now supports `net.createServer()` options.
v9.3.0The `options` parameter can now include `clientCertEngine`.
v8.0.0The `ALPNProtocols` option can be a `TypedArray` or `DataView` now.
v5.0.0ALPN options are supported now.
v0.3.2自 v0.3.2 版本开始新增
  • options Object

    • ALPNProtocols: Buffer | TypedArray | DataView An array of strings, Buffers, TypedArrays, or DataViews, or a single Buffer, TypedArray, or DataView containing the supported ALPN protocols. Buffers should have the format [len][name][len][name]... e.g. 0x05hello0x05world, where the first byte is the length of the next protocol name. Passing an array is usually much simpler, e.g. ['hello', 'world']. (Protocols should be ordered by their priority.)

    • clientCertEngine string Name of an OpenSSL engine which can provide the client certificate.

    • enableTrace boolean If true, tls.TLSSocket.enableTrace() will be called on new connections. Tracing can be enabled after the secure connection is established, but this option must be used to trace the secure connection setup. Default: false.

    • handshakeTimeout number Abort the connection if the SSL/TLS handshake does not finish in the specified number of milliseconds. A 'tlsClientError' is emitted on the tls.Server object whenever a handshake times out. Default: 120000 (120 seconds).

    • rejectUnauthorized boolean If not false the server will reject any connection which is not authorized with the list of supplied CAs. This option only has an effect if requestCert is true. Default: true.

    • requestCert boolean If true the server will request a certificate from clients that connect and attempt to verify that certificate. Default: false.

    • sessionTimeout number The number of seconds after which a TLS session created by the server will no longer be resumable. See Session Resumption for more information. Default: 300.

    • SNICallback(servername, callback) Function A function that will be called if the client supports SNI TLS extension. Two arguments will be passed when called: servername and callback. callback is an error-first callback that takes two optional arguments: error and ctx. ctx, if provided, is a SecureContext instance. tls.createSecureContext() can be used to get a proper SecureContext. If callback is called with a falsy ctx argument, the default secure context of the server will be used. If SNICallback wasn't provided the default callback with high-level API will be used (see below).

    • ticketKeys: Buffer 48-bytes of cryptographically strong pseudorandom data. See Session Resumption for more information.

    • pskCallback Function

      • socket: tls.TLSSocket the server tls.TLSSocket instance for this connection.
      • identity: string identity parameter sent from the client.
      • Returns: Buffer | TypedArray | DataView pre-shared key that must either be a buffer or null to stop the negotiation process. Returned PSK must be compatible with the selected cipher's digest.

      When negotiating TLS-PSK (pre-shared keys), this function is called with the identity provided by the client. If the return value is null the negotiation process will stop and an "unknown_psk_identity" alert message will be sent to the other party. If the server wishes to hide the fact that the PSK identity was not known, the callback must provide some random data as psk to make the connection fail with "decrypt_error" before negotiation is finished. PSK ciphers are disabled by default, and using TLS-PSK thus requires explicitly specifying a cipher suite with the ciphers option. More information can be found in the RFC 4279.

    • pskIdentityHint string optional hint to send to a client to help with selecting the identity during TLS-PSK negotiation. Will be ignored in TLS 1.3. Upon failing to set pskIdentityHint 'tlsClientError' will be emitted with 'ERR_TLS_PSK_SET_IDENTIY_HINT_FAILED' code.

    • ...: Any tls.createSecureContext() option can be provided. For servers, the identity options (pfx, key/cert, or pskCallback) are usually required.

    • ...: Any net.createServer() option can be provided.

  • secureConnectionListener Function

  • Returns: tls.Server

Creates a new tls.Server. The secureConnectionListener, if provided, is automatically set as a listener for the 'secureConnection' event.

The ticketKeys options is automatically shared between node:cluster module workers.

The following illustrates a simple echo server:

JS

The server can be tested by connecting to it using the example client from tls.connect().

M tls.getCiphers()

自 v0.10.2 版本开始新增

  • Returns: string[]

Returns an array with the names of the supported TLS ciphers. The names are lower-case for historical reasons, but must be uppercased to be used in the ciphers option of tls.createSecureContext().

Not all supported ciphers are enabled by default. See Modifying the default TLS cipher suite.

Cipher names that start with 'tls_' are for TLSv1.3, all the others are for TLSv1.2 and below.

JS

M tls.rootCertificates

自 v12.3.0 版本开始新增

  • string[]

An immutable array of strings representing the root certificates (in PEM format) from the bundled Mozilla CA store as supplied by the current Node.js version.

The bundled CA store, as supplied by Node.js, is a snapshot of Mozilla CA store that is fixed at release time. It is identical on all supported platforms.

M tls.DEFAULT_ECDH_CURVE

历史
版本历史变更
v10.0.0Default value changed to `'auto'`.
v0.11.13自 v0.11.13 版本开始新增

The default curve name to use for ECDH key agreement in a tls server. The default value is 'auto'. See tls.createSecureContext() for further information.

M tls.DEFAULT_MAX_VERSION

自 v11.4.0 版本开始新增

  • string The default value of the maxVersion option of tls.createSecureContext(). It can be assigned any of the supported TLS protocol versions, 'TLSv1.3', 'TLSv1.2', 'TLSv1.1', or 'TLSv1'. Default: 'TLSv1.3', unless changed using CLI options. Using --tls-max-v1.2 sets the default to 'TLSv1.2'. Using --tls-max-v1.3 sets the default to 'TLSv1.3'. If multiple of the options are provided, the highest maximum is used.

M tls.DEFAULT_MIN_VERSION

自 v11.4.0 版本开始新增

  • string The default value of the minVersion option of tls.createSecureContext(). It can be assigned any of the supported TLS protocol versions, 'TLSv1.3', 'TLSv1.2', 'TLSv1.1', or 'TLSv1'. Default: 'TLSv1.2', unless changed using CLI options. Using --tls-min-v1.0 sets the default to 'TLSv1'. Using --tls-min-v1.1 sets the default to 'TLSv1.1'. Using --tls-min-v1.3 sets the default to 'TLSv1.3'. If multiple of the options are provided, the lowest minimum is used.