On Mon, Apr 20, 2009 at 1:17 PM, Martin Walsh <mwa...@mwalsh.org> wrote:
> from subprocess import Popen, PIPE > > openssl_cmd = 'openssl s_client -ssl2 -connect somewebsitename:443' > openssl = Popen( > openssl_cmd, shell=True, stdout=PIPE, stderr=PIPE, stdin=PIPE > ) > stdout, stderr = openssl.communicate('GET /') > > Alternatively, if you're using python 2.6 and above, it looks like you > can do something similar with a few lines of code, and the ssl module > from the standard lib ... > > # untested! > import ssl > try: > cert = ssl.get_server_certificate( > ('somewebsitename', 443), ssl.PROTOCOL_SSLv2 > ) > except ssl.SSLError, ex: > # site may not support sslv2 > ... > > HTH, > Marty Thanks Marty; this does indeed help...it just also means I need to really learn how subprocess works. ;) I wish I could claim to be using 2.6, but unfortunately the most current version at work is Python 2.5.2...most boxes here are even below, and I can't convince them to upgrade. Ah, well. Thanks again though! K
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