--- c: Copyright (C) Daniel Stenberg, , et al. SPDX-License-Identifier: curl Title: CURLOPT_SSL_OPTIONS Section: 3 Source: libcurl See-also: - CURLOPT_PROXY_SSL_OPTIONS (3) - CURLOPT_SSLVERSION (3) - CURLOPT_SSL_CIPHER_LIST (3) Protocol: - TLS TLS-backend: - All Added-in: 7.25.0 --- # NAME CURLOPT_SSL_OPTIONS - SSL behavior options # SYNOPSIS ~~~c #include CURLcode curl_easy_setopt(CURL *handle, CURLOPT_SSL_OPTIONS, long bitmask); ~~~ # DESCRIPTION Pass a long with a bitmask to tell libcurl about specific SSL behaviors. Available bits: ## CURLSSLOPT_ALLOW_BEAST Tells libcurl to not attempt to use any workarounds for a security flaw in the SSL3 and TLS1.0 protocols. If this option is not used or this bit is set to 0, the SSL layer libcurl uses may use a work-around for this flaw although it might cause interoperability problems with some (older) SSL implementations. WARNING: avoiding this work-around lessens the security, and by setting this option to 1 you ask for exactly that. This option is only supported for Secure Transport and OpenSSL. ## CURLSSLOPT_NO_REVOKE Tells libcurl to disable certificate revocation checks for those SSL backends where such behavior is present. This option is only supported for Schannel (the native Windows SSL library), with an exception in the case of Windows' Untrusted Publishers block list which it seems cannot be bypassed. (Added in 7.44.0) ## CURLSSLOPT_NO_PARTIALCHAIN Tells libcurl to not accept "partial" certificate chains, which it otherwise does by default. This option is only supported for OpenSSL and fails the certificate verification if the chain ends with an intermediate certificate and not with a root cert. (Added in 7.68.0) ## CURLSSLOPT_REVOKE_BEST_EFFORT Tells libcurl to ignore certificate revocation checks in case of missing or offline distribution points for those SSL backends where such behavior is present. This option is only supported for Schannel (the native Windows SSL library). If combined with *CURLSSLOPT_NO_REVOKE*, the latter takes precedence. (Added in 7.70.0) ## CURLSSLOPT_NATIVE_CA Tell libcurl to use the operating system's native CA store for certificate verification. This option is independent of other CA certificate locations set at run time or build time. Those locations are searched in addition to the native CA store. Works with wolfSSL on Windows, Linux (Debian, Ubuntu, Gentoo, Fedora, RHEL), macOS, Android and iOS (added in 8.3.0); with GnuTLS (added in 8.5.0) and with OpenSSL and its forks (LibreSSL, BoringSSL, etc) on Windows (Added in 7.71.0). ## CURLSSLOPT_AUTO_CLIENT_CERT Tell libcurl to automatically locate and use a client certificate for authentication, when requested by the server. This option is only supported for Schannel (the native Windows SSL library). Prior to 7.77.0 this was the default behavior in libcurl with Schannel. Since the server can request any certificate that supports client authentication in the OS certificate store it could be a privacy violation and unexpected. (Added in 7.77.0) ## CURLSSLOPT_EARLYDATA Tell libcurl to try sending application data as TLS1.3 early data. This option is supported for GnuTLS, wolfSSL, quictls and OpenSSL (but not BoringSSL or AWS-LC). It works on TCP and QUIC connections using ngtcp2. This option works on a best effort basis, in cases when it wasn't possible to send early data the request is resent normally post-handshake. This option does not work when using QUIC. (Added in 8.11.0 for GnuTLS and 8.13.0 for wolfSSL, quictls and OpenSSL) # DEFAULT 0 # %PROTOCOLS% # EXAMPLE ~~~c int main(void) { CURL *curl = curl_easy_init(); if(curl) { CURLcode res; curl_easy_setopt(curl, CURLOPT_URL, "https://example.com/"); /* weaken TLS only for use with silly servers */ curl_easy_setopt(curl, CURLOPT_SSL_OPTIONS, (long)CURLSSLOPT_ALLOW_BEAST | CURLSSLOPT_NO_REVOKE); res = curl_easy_perform(curl); curl_easy_cleanup(curl); } } ~~~ # %AVAILABILITY% # RETURN VALUE curl_easy_setopt(3) returns a CURLcode indicating success or error. CURLE_OK (0) means everything was OK, non-zero means an error occurred, see libcurl-errors(3).