/// <exception cref="System.IO.IOException"></exception> public void Verify(string host, SSLSocket ssl) { if (host == null) { throw new ArgumentNullException("host to verify is null"); } SSLSession session = ssl.GetSession(); if (session == null) { // In our experience this only happens under IBM 1.4.x when // spurious (unrelated) certificates show up in the server' // chain. Hopefully this will unearth the real problem: InputStream @in = ssl.GetInputStream(); @in.Available(); // If ssl.getInputStream().available() didn't cause an // exception, maybe at least now the session is available? session = ssl.GetSession(); if (session == null) { // If it's still null, probably a startHandshake() will // unearth the real problem. ssl.StartHandshake(); // Okay, if we still haven't managed to cause an exception, // might as well go for the NPE. Or maybe we're okay now? session = ssl.GetSession(); } } Certificate[] certs = session.GetPeerCertificates(); X509Certificate x509 = (X509Certificate)certs[0]; Verify(host, x509); }
/// <exception cref="System.IO.IOException"/> public override void Check(string[] host, SSLSocket ssl) { if (host == null) { throw new ArgumentNullException("host to verify is null"); } SSLSession session = ssl.GetSession(); if (session == null) { // In our experience this only happens under IBM 1.4.x when // spurious (unrelated) certificates show up in the server' // chain. Hopefully this will unearth the real problem: InputStream @in = ssl.GetInputStream(); @in.Available(); /* * If you're looking at the 2 lines of code above because * you're running into a problem, you probably have two * options: * #1. Clean up the certificate chain that your server * is presenting (e.g. edit "/etc/apache2/server.crt" * or wherever it is your server's certificate chain * is defined). * * OR * #2. Upgrade to an IBM 1.5.x or greater JVM, or switch * to a non-IBM JVM. */ // If ssl.getInputStream().available() didn't cause an // exception, maybe at least now the session is available? session = ssl.GetSession(); if (session == null) { // If it's still null, probably a startHandshake() will // unearth the real problem. ssl.StartHandshake(); // Okay, if we still haven't managed to cause an exception, // might as well go for the NPE. Or maybe we're okay now? session = ssl.GetSession(); } } Certificate[] certs; try { certs = session.GetPeerCertificates(); } catch (SSLPeerUnverifiedException spue) { InputStream @in = ssl.GetInputStream(); @in.Available(); // Didn't trigger anything interesting? Okay, just throw // original. throw; } X509Certificate x509 = (X509Certificate)certs[0]; Check(host, x509); }