To help anyone looking at the SSL code, here are a few tips I've found handy.
There are several flavors of logging you can turn on.
SSLClientSocketImpl
can log its state transitions and function calls using base/logging.cc
. To enable this, edit net/socket/ssl_client_socket_impl.cc
and change #if 1
to #if 0
. See base/logging.cc
for where the output goes (on Linux, usually stderr).
HttpNetworkTransaction
and friends can log its state transitions using base/trace_event.cc
. To enable this, arrange for your app to call base::TraceLog::StartTracing()
. The output goes to a file named trace...pid.log
in the same directory as the executable (e.g. Hammer/trace_15323.log
).
http://wiki.wireshark.org/SSL describes how to decode SSL traffic. Chromium SSL unit tests that use net/base/ssl_test_util.cc
to set up their servers always use port 9443 with net/data/ssl/certificates/ok_cert.pem
, and port 9666 with net/data/ssl/certificates/expired_cert.pem
This makes it easy to configure Wireshark to decode the traffic: do
Edit / Preferences / Protocols / SSL, and in the “RSA Keys List” box, enter
127.0.0.1,9443,http,<path to ok_cert.pem>;127.0.0.1,9666,http,<path to expired_cert.pem>
e.g.
127.0.0.1,9443,http,/home/dank/chromium/src/net/data/ssl/certificates/ok_cert.pem;127.0.0.1,9666,http,/home/dank/chromium/src/net/data/ssl/certificates/expired_cert.pem
Then capture all tcp traffic on interface lo, and run your test.