This work contains a small modification to work with the luxembourgish CTIE DDJ framework
To Install this fork:
pip install git+https://github.com/Geoportail-Luxembourg/signxml.git
SignXML is an implementation of the W3C XML Signature standard in Python. This standard (also known as XMLDSig and RFC 3275) is used to provide payload security in SAML 2.0, among other uses. Three versions of the standard exist (Version 1 "Second Edition", Version 1.1, and Version 2.0). SignXML implements all of the required components of the standard, and most recommended ones. Its features are:
- Use of defusedxml.lxml to defend against common XML-based attacks when verifying signatures
- Extensions to allow signing with and verifying X.509 certificate chains, including hostname/CN validation
- Support for exclusive XML canonicalization with inclusive prefixes (InclusiveNamespaces PrefixList, required to verify signatures generated by some SAML implementations)
- Modern Python compatibility (2.7-3.4+ and PyPy)
- Well-supported, portable, reliable dependencies: lxml, defusedxml, cryptography, eight, pyOpenSSL
- Comprehensive testing (including the XMLDSig interoperability suite) and continuous integration
- Simple interface with useful defaults
- Compactness, readability, and extensibility
pip install signxml
Note: SignXML depends on lxml and cryptography, which in turn depend on OpenSSL, LibXML, and Python tools to interface with them. You can install those as follows:
Ubuntu, Python 2:
apt-get install python-dev python-cffi libxml2-dev libxslt1-dev libssl-dev
Ubuntu, Python 3:
apt-get install python3-dev python3-cffi libxml2-dev libxslt1-dev libssl-dev
Ubuntu 12.04: python-cffi
is not available on 12.04. Use apt-get install libffi-dev
followed by
pip install cffi
.
OS X: Use Homebrew:
brew install libxml2 libxslt brew link --force libxml2 libxslt
SignXML uses the ElementTree API (also supported by lxml) to work with XML data.
from signxml import xmldsig
cert = open("example.pem").read()
key = open("example.key").read()
root = ElementTree.fromstring(signature_data)
signed_root = xmldsig(root).sign(key=key, cert=cert)
verified_data = xmldsig(signed_root).verify()
Assuming metadata.xml
contains SAML metadata for the assertion source:
from lxml import etree
from base64 import b64decode
from signxml import xmldsig
with open("metadata.xml", "rb") as fh:
cert = etree.parse(fh).find("//ds:X509Certificate").text
assertion_data = xmldsig(b64decode(assertion_body)).verify(x509_cert=cert)
Signing SAML assertions
The SAML assertion schema specifies a location for the enveloped XML signature (between <Issuer>
and
<Subject>
). To sign a SAML assertion in a schema-compliant way, insert a signature placeholder tag at that location
before calling xmldsig: <ds:Signature Id="placeholder"></ds:Signature>
.
See what is signed
It is important to understand and follow the best practice rule of "See what is signed" when verifying XML signatures. The gist of this rule is: if your application neglects to verify that the information it trusts is what was actually signed, the attacker can supply a valid signature but point you to malicious data that wasn't signed by that signature.
In SignXML, you can ensure that the information signed is what you expect to be signed by only trusting the
data returned by the verify()
method. The return value is the XML node or string that was signed.
Recommended reading: http://www.w3.org/TR/xmldsig-bestpractices/#practices-applications
The XML Signature specification defines three ways to compose a signature with the data being signed: enveloped,
detached, and enveloping signature. Enveloped is the default method. To specify the type of signature that you want to
generate, pass the method
argument to sign()
:
signed_root = xmldsig(root).sign(method=signxml.methods.detached, key=key, cert=cert)
verified_data = xmldsig(signed_root).verify()
For detached signatures, the code above will use the Id
or ID
attribute of root
to generate a relative URI
(<Reference URI="#value"
). You can also override the value of URI
by passing a reference_uri
argument to
sign()
.
To verify a detached signature that refers to an external entity, pass a callable resolver in
xmldsig.verify(uri_resolver=...)
.
See the API documentation for more.
- Andrey Kislyuk
- Project home page (GitHub)
- Documentation (Read the Docs)
- Package distribution (PyPI)
- Change log
- List of W3C XML Signature standards and drafts
- W3C Recommendation: XML Signature Syntax and Processing (Second Edition)
- W3C Recommendation: XML Signature Syntax and Processing Version 1.1
- W3C Working Group Note: XML Signature Syntax and Processing Version 2.0
- W3C Working Group Note: XML Signature Best Practices
- XML-Signature Interoperability
- W3C Working Group Note: Test Cases for C14N 1.1 and XMLDSig Interoperability
- XMLSec: Related links
Please report bugs, issues, feature requests, etc. on GitHub.
Licensed under the terms of the Apache License, Version 2.0.