Use require('tls')
to access this module.
The tls
module uses OpenSSL to provide Transport Layer Security and/or Secure Socket Layer: encrypted stream communication.
TLS/SSL is a public/private key infrastructure. Each client and each server must have a private key. A private key is created like this:
openssl genrsa -out ryans-key.pem 2048
All servers and some clients need to have a certificate. Certificates are public keys signed by a Certificate Authority or self-signed. The first step to getting a certificate is to create a "Certificate Signing Request" (CSR) file. This is done with:
openssl req -new -sha256 -key ryans-key.pem -out ryans-csr.pem
To create a self-signed certificate with the CSR, do this:
openssl x509 -req -in ryans-csr.pem -signkey ryans-key.pem -out ryans-cert.pem
Alternatively you can send the CSR to a Certificate Authority for signing.
For Perfect Forward Secrecy, it is required to generate Diffie-Hellman parameters:
openssl dhparam -outform PEM -out dhparam.pem 2048
To create .pfx or .p12, do this:
openssl pkcs12 -export -in agent5-cert.pem -inkey agent5-key.pem \ -certfile ca-cert.pem -out agent5.pfx
in
: certificateinkey
: private keycertfile
: all CA certs concatenated in one file like cat ca1-cert.pem ca2-cert.pem > ca-cert.pem
The TLS protocol lets the client renegotiate certain aspects of the TLS session. Unfortunately, session renegotiation requires a disproportional amount of server-side resources, which makes it a potential vector for denial-of-service attacks.
To mitigate this, renegotiations are limited to three times every 10 minutes. An error is emitted on the tls.TLSSocket
instance when the threshold is exceeded. The limits are configurable:
tls.CLIENT_RENEG_LIMIT
: renegotiation limit, default is 3.
tls.CLIENT_RENEG_WINDOW
: renegotiation window in seconds, default is 10 minutes.
Don't change the defaults unless you know what you are doing.
To test your server, connect to it with openssl s_client -connect address:port
and tap R<CR>
(that's the letter R
followed by a carriage return) a few times.
Node.js is built with a default suite of enabled and disabled TLS ciphers. Currently, the default cipher suite is:
ECDHE-RSA-AES128-GCM-SHA256: ECDHE-ECDSA-AES128-GCM-SHA256: ECDHE-RSA-AES256-GCM-SHA384: ECDHE-ECDSA-AES256-GCM-SHA384: DHE-RSA-AES128-GCM-SHA256: ECDHE-RSA-AES128-SHA256: DHE-RSA-AES128-SHA256: ECDHE-RSA-AES256-SHA384: DHE-RSA-AES256-SHA384: ECDHE-RSA-AES256-SHA256: DHE-RSA-AES256-SHA256: HIGH: !aNULL: !eNULL: !EXPORT: !DES: !RC4: !MD5: !PSK: !SRP: !CAMELLIA
This default can be overriden entirely using the --tls-cipher-list
command line switch. For instance, the following makes ECDHE-RSA-AES128-GCM-SHA256:!RC4
the default TLS cipher suite:
node --tls-cipher-list="ECDHE-RSA-AES128-GCM-SHA256:!RC4"
Note that 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 should by used only if absolutely necessary.
ALPN (Application-Layer Protocol Negotiation Extension), NPN (Next Protocol Negotiation) and SNI (Server Name Indication) are TLS handshake extensions allowing you:
The term "Forward Secrecy" or "Perfect Forward Secrecy" describes a feature of key-agreement (i.e. key-exchange) methods. Practically it means that even if the private key of a (your) server is compromised, communication can only be decrypted by eavesdroppers if they manage to obtain the key-pair specifically generated for each session.
This is achieved by randomly generating a key pair for key-agreement on every handshake (in contrary to the same key for all sessions). Methods implementing this technique, thus offering Perfect Forward Secrecy, are called "ephemeral".
Currently two methods are commonly used to achieve Perfect Forward Secrecy (note the character "E" appended to the traditional abbreviations):
Ephemeral methods may have some performance drawbacks, because key generation is expensive.
tls.TLSSocket
instead.This is an encrypted stream.
A proxy to the underlying socket's bytesWritten accessor, this will return the total bytes written to the socket, including the TLS overhead.
Returned by tls.createSecurePair.
The event is emitted from the SecurePair once the pair has successfully established a secure connection.
Similarly to the checking for the server 'secureConnection'
event, pair.cleartext.authorized should be checked to confirm whether the certificate used properly authorized.
This class is a subclass of net.Server
and has the same methods on it. Instead of accepting just raw TCP connections, this accepts encrypted connections using TLS or SSL.
function (exception, tlsSocket) { }
When a client connection emits an 'error'
event before a secure connection is established it will be forwarded here.
tlsSocket
is the tls.TLSSocket
that the error originated from.
function (sessionId, sessionData, callback) { }
Emitted on creation of TLS session. May be used to store sessions in external storage. callback
must be invoked eventually, otherwise no data will be sent or received from secure connection.
NOTE: adding this event listener will have an effect only on connections established after addition of event listener.
function (certificate, issuer, callback) { }
Emitted when the client sends a certificate status request. You could parse server's current certificate to obtain OCSP url and certificate id, and after obtaining OCSP response invoke callback(null, resp)
, where resp
is a Buffer
instance. Both certificate
and issuer
are a Buffer
DER-representations of the primary and issuer's certificates. They could be used to obtain OCSP certificate id and OCSP endpoint url.
Alternatively, callback(null, null)
could be called, meaning that there is no OCSP response.
Calling callback(err)
will result in a socket.destroy(err)
call.
Typical flow:
'OCSPRequest'
to it (via status info extension in ClientHello.)'OCSPRequest'
event listener if presentcertificate
or issuer
and performs an OCSP request to the CAOCSPResponse
from CA and sends it back to client via callback
argumentNOTE: issuer
could be null, if the certificate is self-signed or if the issuer is not in the root certificates list. (You could provide an issuer via ca
option.)
NOTE: adding this event listener will have an effect only on connections established after addition of event listener.
NOTE: you may want to use some npm module like asn1.js to parse the certificates.
function (sessionId, callback) { }
Emitted when client wants to resume previous TLS session. Event listener may perform lookup in external storage using given sessionId
, and invoke callback(null, sessionData)
once finished. If session can't be resumed (i.e. doesn't exist in storage) one may call callback(null, null)
. Calling callback(err)
will terminate incoming connection and destroy socket.
NOTE: adding this event listener will have an effect only on connections established after addition of event listener.
Here's an example for using TLS session resumption:
var tlsSessionStore = {}; server.on('newSession', (id, data, cb) => { tlsSessionStore[id.toString('hex')] = data; cb(); }); server.on('resumeSession', (id, cb) => { cb(null, tlsSessionStore[id.toString('hex')] || null); });
function (tlsSocket) {}
This event is emitted after a new connection has been successfully handshaked. The argument is an instance of tls.TLSSocket
. It has all the common stream methods and events.
socket.authorized
is a boolean value which indicates if the client has verified by one of the supplied certificate authorities for the server. If socket.authorized
is false, then socket.authorizationError
is set to describe how authorization failed. Implied but worth mentioning: depending on the settings of the TLS server, you unauthorized connections may be accepted.
socket.npnProtocol
is a string containing the selected NPN protocol and socket.alpnProtocol
is a string containing the selected ALPN protocol, When both NPN and ALPN extensions are received, ALPN takes precedence over NPN and the next protocol is selected by ALPN. When ALPN has no selected protocol, this returns false.
socket.servername
is a string containing servername requested with SNI.
Add secure context that will be used if client request's SNI hostname is matching passed hostname
(wildcards can be used). context
can contain key
, cert
, ca
and/or any other properties from tls.createSecureContext()
options
argument.
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.
Stops the server from accepting new connections. This function is asynchronous, the server is finally closed when the server emits a 'close'
event. Optionally, you can pass a callback to listen for the 'close'
event.
The number of concurrent connections on the server.
Returns Buffer
instance holding the keys currently used for encryption/decryption of the TLS Session Tickets
Begin accepting connections on the specified port
and hostname
. If the hostname
is omitted, the server will accept connections on any IPv6 address (::
) when IPv6 is available, or any IPv4 address (0.0.0.0
) otherwise. A port value of zero will assign a random port.
This function is asynchronous. The last parameter callback
will be called when the server has been bound.
See net.Server
for more information.
Set this property to reject connections when the server's connection count gets high.
Updates the keys for encryption/decryption of the TLS Session Tickets.
NOTE: the buffer should be 48 bytes long. See server ticketKeys
option for more information oh how it is going to be used.
NOTE: the change is effective only for the future server connections. Existing or currently pending server connections will use previous keys.
This is a wrapped version of net.Socket
that does transparent encryption of written data and all required TLS negotiation.
This instance implements a duplex Stream interfaces. It has all the common stream methods and events.
Methods that return TLS connection meta data (e.g. tls.TLSSocket.getPeerCertificate()
will only return data while the connection is open.
Construct a new TLSSocket object from existing TCP socket.
socket
is an instance of net.Socket
options
is an optional object that might contain following properties:
secureContext
: An optional TLS context object from tls.createSecureContext()
isServer
: If true
the TLS socket will be instantiated in server-mode. Default: false
server
: An optional net.Server
instance
requestCert
: Optional, see tls.createSecurePair()
rejectUnauthorized
: Optional, see tls.createSecurePair()
NPNProtocols
: Optional, see tls.createServer()
ALPNProtocols
: Optional, see [tls.createServer][]
SNICallback
: Optional, see tls.createServer()
session
: Optional, a Buffer
instance, containing TLS session
requestOCSP
: Optional, if true
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
function (response) { }
This event will be emitted if requestOCSP
option was set. response
is a buffer object, containing server's OCSP response.
Traditionally, the response
is a signed object from the server's CA that contains information about server's certificate revocation status.
This event is emitted after a new connection has been successfully handshaked. The listener will be called no matter if the server's certificate was authorized or not. It is up to the user to test tlsSocket.authorized
to see if the server certificate was signed by one of the specified CAs. If tlsSocket.authorized === false
then the error can be found in tlsSocket.authorizationError
. Also if ALPN or NPN was used - you can check tlsSocket.alpnProtocol
or tlsSocket.npnProtocol
for the negotiated protocol.
Returns the bound address, the address family name and port of the underlying socket as reported by the operating system. Returns an object with three properties, e.g. { port: 12346, family: 'IPv4', address: '127.0.0.1' }
A boolean that is true
if the peer certificate was signed by one of the specified CAs, otherwise false
The reason why the peer's certificate has not been verified. This property becomes available only when tlsSocket.authorized === false
.
Static boolean value, always true
. May be used to distinguish TLS sockets from regular ones.
Returns an object representing the cipher name and the SSL/TLS protocol version of the current connection.
Example: <name: 'AES256-SHA', version: 'TLSv1/SSLv3'>
See SSL_CIPHER_get_name() and SSL_CIPHER_get_version() in https://www.openssl.org/docs/man1.0.2/ssl/ssl.html#DEALING-WITH-CIPHERS for more information.
Returns an object representing the peer's certificate. The returned object has some properties corresponding to the field of the certificate. If detailed
argument is true
the full chain with issuer
property will be returned, if false
only the top certificate without issuer
property.
Example:
{ subject: { C: 'UK', ST: 'Acknack Ltd', L: 'Rhys Jones', O: 'node.js', OU: 'Test TLS Certificate', CN: 'localhost' }, issuerInfo: { C: 'UK', ST: 'Acknack Ltd', L: 'Rhys Jones', O: 'node.js', OU: 'Test TLS Certificate', CN: 'localhost' }, issuer: { ... another certificate ... }, raw: < RAW DER buffer >, valid_from: 'Nov 11 09:52:22 2009 GMT', valid_to: 'Nov 6 09:52:22 2029 GMT', fingerprint: '2A:7A:C2:DD:E5:F9:CC:53:72:35:99:7A:02:5A:71:38:52:EC:8A:DF', serialNumber: 'B9B0D332A1AA5635' }
If the peer does not provide a certificate, it returns null
or an empty object.
Return ASN.1 encoded TLS session or undefined
if none was negotiated. Could be used to speed up handshake establishment when reconnecting to the server.
NOTE: Works only with client TLS sockets. Useful only for debugging, for session reuse provide session
option to tls.connect()
.
Return TLS session ticket or undefined
if none was negotiated.
The numeric representation of the local port.
The string representation of the local IP address.
The string representation of the remote IP address. For example, '74.125.127.100'
or '2001:4860:a005::68'
.
The string representation of the remote IP family. 'IPv4'
or 'IPv6'
.
The numeric representation of the remote port. For example, 443
.
Initiate TLS renegotiation process. The options
may contain the following fields: rejectUnauthorized
, requestCert
(See tls.createServer()
for details). callback(err)
will be executed with null
as err
, once the renegotiation is successfully completed.
NOTE: Can be used to request peer's certificate after the secure connection has been established.
ANOTHER NOTE: When running as the server, socket will be destroyed with an error after handshakeTimeout
timeout.
Set maximum TLS fragment size (default and maximum value is: 16384
, minimum is: 512
). Returns true
on success, false
otherwise.
Smaller fragment size decreases buffering latency on the client: large 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.
Creates a new client connection to the given port
and host
(old API) or options.port
and options.host
. (If host
is omitted, it defaults to localhost
.) options
should be an object which specifies:
host
: Host the client should connect to
port
: Port the client should connect to
socket
: Establish secure connection on a given socket rather than creating a new socket. If this option is specified, host
and port
are ignored.
path
: Creates unix socket connection to path. If this option is specified, host
and port
are ignored.
pfx
: A string or Buffer
containing the private key, certificate and CA certs of the client in PFX or PKCS12 format.
key
: A string or Buffer
containing the private key of the client in PEM format. (Could be an array of keys).
passphrase
: A string of passphrase for the private key or pfx.
cert
: A string or Buffer
containing the certificate key of the client in PEM format. (Could be an array of certs).
ca
: A string, Buffer
or array of strings or Buffer
s of trusted certificates in PEM format. If this is omitted several well known "root" CAs will be used, like VeriSign. These are used to authorize connections.
ciphers
: A string describing the ciphers to use or exclude, separated by :
. Uses the same default cipher suite as tls.createServer()
.
rejectUnauthorized
: If true
, 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
.
NPNProtocols
: An array of strings or Buffer
s containing supported NPN protocols. Buffer
s should have following format: 0x05hello0x05world
, where first byte is next protocol name's length. (Passing array should usually be much simpler: ['hello', 'world']
.)
ALPNProtocols
: An array of strings or Buffer
s containing supported ALPN protocols. Buffer
s should have following format: 0x05hello0x05world
, where the first byte is the next protocol name's length. (Passing array should usually be much simpler: ['hello', 'world']
.)
servername
: Servername for SNI (Server Name Indication) TLS extension.
checkServerIdentity(servername, cert)
: Provide an override for checking server's hostname against the certificate. Should return an error if verification fails. Return undefined
if passing.
secureProtocol
: The SSL method to use, e.g. SSLv3_method
to force SSL version 3. The possible values depend on your installation of OpenSSL and are defined in the constant SSL_METHODS.
secureContext
: An optional TLS context object from tls.createSecureContext( ... )
. Could it be used for caching client certificates, key, and CA certificates.
session
: A Buffer
instance, containing TLS session.
The callback
parameter will be added as a listener for the 'secureConnect'
event.
tls.connect()
returns a tls.TLSSocket
object.
Here is an example of a client of echo server as described previously:
const tls = require('tls'); const fs = require('fs'); const options = { // These are necessary only if using the client certificate authentication key: fs.readFileSync('client-key.pem'), cert: fs.readFileSync('client-cert.pem'), // This is necessary only if the server uses the self-signed certificate ca: [ fs.readFileSync('server-cert.pem') ] }; var socket = tls.connect(8000, options, () => { console.log('client connected', socket.authorized ? 'authorized' : 'unauthorized'); process.stdin.pipe(socket); process.stdin.resume(); }); socket.setEncoding('utf8'); socket.on('data', (data) => { console.log(data); }); socket.on('end', () => { server.close(); });
Or
const tls = require('tls'); const fs = require('fs'); const options = { pfx: fs.readFileSync('client.pfx') }; var socket = tls.connect(8000, options, () => { console.log('client connected', socket.authorized ? 'authorized' : 'unauthorized'); process.stdin.pipe(socket); process.stdin.resume(); }); socket.setEncoding('utf8'); socket.on('data', (data) => { console.log(data); }); socket.on('end', () => { server.close(); });
Creates a credentials object, with the optional details being a dictionary with keys:
pfx
: A string or buffer holding the PFX or PKCS12 encoded private key, certificate and CA certificateskey
: A string or Buffer
containing the private key of the server in PEM format. To support multiple keys using different algorithms, an array can be provided. It can either be a plain array of keys, or an array of objects in the format {pem: key, passphrase: passphrase}
. (Required)passphrase
: A string of passphrase for the private key or pfxcert
: A string holding the PEM encoded certificateca
: A string, Buffer
or array of strings or Buffer
s of trusted certificates in PEM format. If this is omitted several well known "root" CAs will be used, like VeriSign. These are used to authorize connections.crl
: Either a string or list of strings of PEM encoded CRLs (Certificate Revocation List)ciphers
: A string describing the ciphers to use or exclude. Consult https://www.openssl.org/docs/man1.0.2/apps/ciphers.html#CIPHER-LIST-FORMAT for details on the format.honorCipherOrder
: When choosing a cipher, use the server's preferences instead of the client preferences. For further details see tls
module documentation.If no 'ca' details are given, then Node.js will use the default publicly trusted list of CAs as given in http://mxr.mozilla.org/mozilla/source/security/nss/lib/ckfw/builtins/certdata.txt.
Creates a new secure pair object with two streams, one of which reads/writes encrypted data, and one reads/writes cleartext data. Generally the encrypted one is piped to/from an incoming encrypted data stream, and the cleartext one is used as a replacement for the initial encrypted stream.
credentials
: A secure context object from tls.createSecureContext( ... )
isServer
: A boolean indicating whether this tls connection should be opened as a server or a client.
requestCert
: A boolean indicating whether a server should request a certificate from a connecting client. Only applies to server connections.
rejectUnauthorized
: A boolean indicating whether a server should automatically reject clients with invalid certificates. Only applies to servers with requestCert
enabled.
options
: An object with common SSL options. See tls.TLSSocket
.
tls.createSecurePair()
returns a SecurePair object with cleartext
and encrypted
stream properties.
NOTE: cleartext
has the same APIs as tls.TLSSocket
Creates a new tls.Server. The connectionListener
argument is automatically set as a listener for the 'secureConnection'
event. The options
object has these possibilities:
pfx
: A string or Buffer
containing the private key, certificate and CA certs of the server in PFX or PKCS12 format. (Mutually exclusive with the key
, cert
and ca
options.)
key
: A string or Buffer
containing the private key of the server in PEM format. To support multiple keys using different algorithms, an array can be provided. It can either be a plain array of keys, or an array of objects in the format {pem: key, passphrase: passphrase}
. (Required)
passphrase
: A string of passphrase for the private key or pfx.
cert
: A string or Buffer
containing the certificate key of the server in PEM format. (Could be an array of certs). (Required)
ca
: A string, Buffer
or array of strings or Buffer
s of trusted certificates in PEM format. If this is omitted several well known "root" CAs will be used, like VeriSign. These are used to authorize connections.
crl
: Either a string or list of strings of PEM encoded CRLs (Certificate Revocation List)
ciphers
: A string describing the ciphers to use or exclude, separated by :
. The default cipher suite is:
ECDHE-RSA-AES128-GCM-SHA256: ECDHE-ECDSA-AES128-GCM-SHA256: ECDHE-RSA-AES256-GCM-SHA384: ECDHE-ECDSA-AES256-GCM-SHA384: DHE-RSA-AES128-GCM-SHA256: ECDHE-RSA-AES128-SHA256: DHE-RSA-AES128-SHA256: ECDHE-RSA-AES256-SHA384: DHE-RSA-AES256-SHA384: ECDHE-RSA-AES256-SHA256: DHE-RSA-AES256-SHA256: HIGH: !aNULL: !eNULL: !EXPORT: !DES: !RC4: !MD5: !PSK: !SRP: !CAMELLIA
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 compatibiltity.
128 bit AES is preferred over 192 and 256 bit AES in light of specific attacks affecting larger AES key sizes.
Old clients that rely on insecure and deprecated RC4 or DES-based ciphers (like Internet Explorer 6) aren't able to complete the handshake with the default configuration. If you absolutely must support these clients, the TLS recommendations may offer a compatible cipher suite. For more details on the format, see the OpenSSL cipher list format documentation.
ecdhCurve
: A string describing a named curve to use for ECDH key agreement or false to disable ECDH.
Defaults to prime256v1
(NIST P-256). 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.
dhparam
: A string or Buffer
containing Diffie Hellman parameters, required for Perfect Forward Secrecy. Use openssl dhparam
to create it. Its key length should be greater than or equal to 1024 bits, otherwise it throws an error. It is strongly recommended to use 2048 bits or more for stronger security. If omitted or invalid, it is silently discarded and DHE ciphers won't be available.
handshakeTimeout
: Abort the connection if the SSL/TLS handshake does not finish in this many milliseconds. The default is 120 seconds.
A 'clientError'
is emitted on the tls.Server
object whenever a handshake times out.
honorCipherOrder
: When choosing a cipher, use the server's preferences instead of the client preferences. Default: true
.
requestCert
: If true
the server will request a certificate from clients that connect and attempt to verify that certificate. Default: false
.
rejectUnauthorized
: If true
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: false
.
NPNProtocols
: An array or Buffer
of possible NPN protocols. (Protocols should be ordered by their priority).
ALPNProtocols
: An array or Buffer
of possible ALPN protocols. (Protocols should be ordered by their priority). When the server receives both NPN and ALPN extensions from the client, ALPN takes precedence over NPN and the server does not send an NPN extension to the client.
SNICallback(servername, cb)
: A function that will be called if client supports SNI TLS extension. Two argument will be passed to it: servername
, and cb
. SNICallback
should invoke cb(null, ctx)
, where ctx
is a SecureContext instance. (You can use tls.createSecureContext(...)
to get proper SecureContext). If SNICallback
wasn't provided the default callback with high-level API will be used (see below).
sessionTimeout
: An integer specifying the seconds after which TLS session identifiers and TLS session tickets created by the server are timed out. See SSL_CTX_set_timeout for more details.
ticketKeys
: A 48-byte Buffer
instance consisting of 16-byte prefix, 16-byte hmac key, 16-byte AES key. You could use it to accept tls session tickets on multiple instances of tls server.
NOTE: Automatically shared between cluster
module workers.
sessionIdContext
: A string containing an opaque identifier for session resumption. If requestCert
is true
, the default is MD5 hash value generated from command-line. (In FIPS mode a truncated SHA1 hash is used instead.) Otherwise, the default is not provided.
secureProtocol
: The SSL method to use, e.g. SSLv3_method
to force SSL version 3. The possible values depend on your installation of OpenSSL and are defined in the constant SSL_METHODS.
Here is a simple example echo server:
const tls = require('tls'); const fs = require('fs'); const options = { key: fs.readFileSync('server-key.pem'), cert: fs.readFileSync('server-cert.pem'), // This is necessary only if using the client certificate authentication. requestCert: true, // This is necessary only if the client uses the self-signed certificate. ca: [ fs.readFileSync('client-cert.pem') ] }; var server = tls.createServer(options, (socket) => { console.log('server connected', socket.authorized ? 'authorized' : 'unauthorized'); socket.write('welcome!\n'); socket.setEncoding('utf8'); socket.pipe(socket); }); server.listen(8000, () => { console.log('server bound'); });
Or
const tls = require('tls'); const fs = require('fs'); const options = { pfx: fs.readFileSync('server.pfx'), // This is necessary only if using the client certificate authentication. requestCert: true, }; var server = tls.createServer(options, (socket) => { console.log('server connected', socket.authorized ? 'authorized' : 'unauthorized'); socket.write('welcome!\n'); socket.setEncoding('utf8'); socket.pipe(socket); }); server.listen(8000, () => { console.log('server bound'); });
You can test this server by connecting to it with openssl s_client
:
openssl s_client -connect 127.0.0.1:8000
Returns an array with the names of the supported SSL ciphers.
Example:
var ciphers = tls.getCiphers(); console.log(ciphers); // ['AES128-SHA', 'AES256-SHA', ...]
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Licensed under the MIT License.
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https://nodejs.org/dist/latest-v4.x/docs/api/tls.html