What does "SSLError: [SSL] PEM lib (_ssl.c:2532)" mean using the Python ssl library?

93,376

Solution 1

Assuming that version 3.6 is being used:

See: https://github.com/python/cpython/blob/3.6/Modules/_ssl.c#L3523-L3534

 PySSL_BEGIN_ALLOW_THREADS_S(pw_info.thread_state);
 r = SSL_CTX_check_private_key(self->ctx);
 PySSL_END_ALLOW_THREADS_S(pw_info.thread_state);
 if (r != 1) { 
    _setSSLError(NULL, 0, __FILE__, __LINE__);
    goto error;
 }

What it is saying is that SSL_CTX_check_private_key failed; thus, the private key is not correct.

Reference to the likely version:

Solution 2

In your code, you are calling:

sslcontext.load_cert_chain(cert, keyfile=ca_cert)

From the documentation:

Load a private key and the corresponding certificate. The certfile string must be the path to a single file in PEM format containing the certificate as well as any number of CA certificates needed to establish the certificate’s authenticity. The keyfile string, if present, must point to a file containing the private key in. Otherwise the private key will be taken from certfile as well. See the discussion of Certificates for more information on how the certificate is stored in the certfile.

Based on the name of the arguments in your example, it looks like you are passing a CA certificate to the keyfile argument. That is incorrect, you need to pass in the private key that was used to generate your local certificate (otherwise the client cannot use your certificate). A private key file will look something like:

-----BEGIN RSA PRIVATE KEY-----
Proc-Type: 4,ENCRYPTED
DEK-Info: AES-128-CBC,9BA4973008F0A0B36FBE1426C198DD1B

...data...
-----END RSA PRIVATE KEY-----

You only need the CA certificate if you are trying to verify the validity of SSL certificates that have been signed by this certificate. In that case, you would probably use SSLContext.load_verify_locations() to load the CA certificate (although I have not worked with the SSL module recently, so don't take my word on that point).

Solution 3

The error means a private key file is missing. Generate a key pair in openssl shell: openssl req -x509 -newkey rsa:4096 -keyout key.pem -out cert.pem -days 365

Start Python SSL Server:

from http.server import HTTPServer, 
             SimpleHTTPRequestHandler

import ssl

httpd = HTTPServer(('localhost', 4443), 
                           SimpleHTTPRequestHandler)

httpd.socket = ssl.wrap_socket(httpd.socket, 
                 certfile='/tmp/cert.pem',keyfile='
                           /tmp/key.pem', server_side=True)

httpd.serve_forever()

(We use port 4443 so that I can run the tests as normal user; the usual port 443 requires root privileges).

Solution 4

In my case, this error meant that my certificate had the wrong file extension. I had to convert my cert.der file to a cert.pem file using the below:

openssl x509 -inform der -in cert.der -out cert.pem 
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sargas

Web Developer at Zions Bank, with experience in: Go Ruby on Rails Middleman Django PHP (for supporting old projects) MySQL and PostgreSQL git Docker Redis JavaScript SSL PostgreSQL HTTP protocol and a lot of Linux tools that make developing even better like powerline-shell rbenv git-up neovim etc. More about me at my personal web page andradei.com

Updated on July 09, 2022

Comments

  • sargas
    sargas almost 2 years

    I am trying to use connect to another party using Python 3 asyncio module and get this error:

         36     sslcontext = ssl.SSLContext(ssl.PROTOCOL_TLSv1)
    ---> 37     sslcontext.load_cert_chain(cert, keyfile=ca_cert)
         38
    
    SSLError: [SSL] PEM lib (_ssl.c:2532)
    

    The question is just what the error mean. My certificate is correct, the keyfile (CA certificate) might not.

  • Adam Matan
    Adam Matan about 9 years
    Agreed. You went to the source and found the right answer.
  • sargas
    sargas about 9 years
    I read it before but had no clue of what that meant. I think it is using openssl (on Unix systems) and reporting the error it got at system level. That explains why the error would generate from that line in the source, right?
  • BenDavid
    BenDavid about 5 years
    I received the same error and I only need the certificate chain verified. The private key is not relevant so this answer helps as it explained that my ansible script is looking for a private key but should be set to only look for the certificate chain.
  • DisappointedByUnaccountableMod
    DisappointedByUnaccountableMod about 3 years
    It wasn’t the extension that was wrong, the file format as wrong and you had to convert the file to the pem format.