I wrote a socket server using Python 2.7 and the socket module.
Everything works as expected when I issue an HTTP request: the server accepts it and answers correctly. But if instead of (let's say) http://a.com I browse for https://a.com I receive some kind of encrypted header and I don't know how to tell the client that HTTPS is not supported by the server.
I googled a bit but nothing good. I tried to reply in plain HTTP but the response is clearly ignored by the browser.
If anyone would be able to show me a way to tell the client there's no SSL it would really help me.
Thanks in advance.
解决方案
I had the same problem. You have to configure "ssl" context within your code as such:
import socket, ssl
HOST = "www.youtube.com"
PORT = 443
context = ssl.SSLContext(ssl.PROTOCOL_TLSv1)
s = socket.socket(socket.AF_INET, socket.SOCK_STREAM)
s_sock = context.wrap_socket(s, server_hostname=HOST)
s_sock.connect((HOST, 443))
s_sock.send(" GET / HTTP/1.1\r\nHost: www.youtube.com\r\n\r\n ".encode())
while True:
data = s_sock.recv(2048)
if ( len(data) < 1 ) :
break
print(data)
s_sock.close()