Struct rustls::server::ServerConfig
source · pub struct ServerConfig {
pub ignore_client_order: bool,
pub max_fragment_size: Option<usize>,
pub session_storage: Arc<dyn StoresServerSessions + Send + Sync>,
pub ticketer: Arc<dyn ProducesTickets>,
pub cert_resolver: Arc<dyn ResolvesServerCert>,
pub alpn_protocols: Vec<Vec<u8>>,
pub key_log: Arc<dyn KeyLog>,
pub enable_secret_extraction: bool,
pub max_early_data_size: u32,
pub send_half_rtt_data: bool,
pub send_tls13_tickets: usize,
/* private fields */
}
Expand description
Common configuration for a set of server sessions.
Making one of these is cheap, though one of the inputs may be expensive: gathering trust roots
from the operating system to add to the RootCertStore
passed to a ClientCertVerifier
builder may take on the order of a few hundred milliseconds.
These must be created via the ServerConfig::builder()
or ServerConfig::builder_with_provider()
function.
§Defaults
ServerConfig::max_fragment_size
: the default isNone
(meaning 16kB).ServerConfig::session_storage
: the default stores 256 sessions in memory.ServerConfig::alpn_protocols
: the default is empty – no ALPN protocol is negotiated.ServerConfig::key_log
: key material is not logged.ServerConfig::send_tls13_tickets
: 4 tickets are sent.
Fields§
§ignore_client_order: bool
Ignore the client’s ciphersuite order. Instead, choose the top ciphersuite in the server list which is supported by the client.
max_fragment_size: Option<usize>
The maximum size of plaintext input to be emitted in a single TLS record. A value of None is equivalent to the TLS maximum of 16 kB.
rustls enforces an arbitrary minimum of 32 bytes for this field. Out of range values are reported as errors from ServerConnection::new.
Setting this value to a little less than the TCP MSS may improve latency for stream-y workloads.
session_storage: Arc<dyn StoresServerSessions + Send + Sync>
How to store client sessions.
ticketer: Arc<dyn ProducesTickets>
How to produce tickets.
cert_resolver: Arc<dyn ResolvesServerCert>
How to choose a server cert and key. This is usually set by ConfigBuilder::with_single_cert or ConfigBuilder::with_cert_resolver. For async applications, see also Acceptor.
alpn_protocols: Vec<Vec<u8>>
Protocol names we support, most preferred first. If empty we don’t do ALPN at all.
key_log: Arc<dyn KeyLog>
How to output key material for debugging. The default does nothing.
enable_secret_extraction: bool
Allows traffic secrets to be extracted after the handshake, e.g. for kTLS setup.
max_early_data_size: u32
Amount of early data to accept for sessions created by this config. Specify 0 to disable early data. The default is 0.
Read the early data via ServerConnection::early_data
.
The units for this are both plaintext bytes, and ciphertext bytes, depending on whether the server accepts a client’s early_data or not. It is therefore recommended to include some slop in this value to account for the unknown amount of ciphertext expansion in the latter case.
send_half_rtt_data: bool
Whether the server should send “0.5RTT” data. This means the server sends data after its first flight of handshake messages, without waiting for the client to complete the handshake.
This can improve TTFB latency for either server-speaks-first protocols,
or client-speaks-first protocols when paired with “0RTT” data. This
comes at the cost of a subtle weakening of the normal handshake
integrity guarantees that TLS provides. Note that the initial
ClientHello
is indirectly authenticated because it is included
in the transcript used to derive the keys used to encrypt the data.
This only applies to TLS1.3 connections. TLS1.2 connections cannot do this optimisation and this setting is ignored for them. It is also ignored for TLS1.3 connections that even attempt client authentication.
This defaults to false. This means the first application data
sent by the server comes after receiving and validating the client’s
handshake up to the Finished
message. This is the safest option.
send_tls13_tickets: usize
How many TLS1.3 tickets to send immediately after a successful handshake.
Because TLS1.3 tickets are single-use, this allows a client to perform multiple resumptions.
The default is 4.
If this is 0, no tickets are sent and clients will not be able to do any resumption.
Implementations§
source§impl ServerConfig
impl ServerConfig
sourcepub fn builder() -> ConfigBuilder<Self, WantsVerifier>
pub fn builder() -> ConfigBuilder<Self, WantsVerifier>
Create a builder for a server configuration with the default
CryptoProvider
: crypto::ring::default_provider
and safe ciphersuite and protocol
defaults.
For more information, see the ConfigBuilder
documentation.
sourcepub fn builder_with_protocol_versions(
versions: &[&'static SupportedProtocolVersion],
) -> ConfigBuilder<Self, WantsVerifier>
pub fn builder_with_protocol_versions( versions: &[&'static SupportedProtocolVersion], ) -> ConfigBuilder<Self, WantsVerifier>
Create a builder for a server configuration with the default
CryptoProvider
: crypto::ring::default_provider
, safe ciphersuite defaults and
the provided protocol versions.
Panics if provided an empty slice of supported versions.
For more information, see the ConfigBuilder
documentation.
sourcepub fn builder_with_provider(
provider: Arc<CryptoProvider>,
) -> ConfigBuilder<Self, WantsVersions>
pub fn builder_with_provider( provider: Arc<CryptoProvider>, ) -> ConfigBuilder<Self, WantsVersions>
Create a builder for a server configuration with a specific CryptoProvider
.
This will use the provider’s configured ciphersuites. You must additionally choose
which protocol versions to enable, using with_protocol_versions
or
with_safe_default_protocol_versions
and handling the Result
in case a protocol
version is not supported by the provider’s ciphersuites.
For more information, see the ConfigBuilder
documentation.