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SSL CertInfo displays expiration dates and other information for SSL certificates from a set of hosts.
- Hosts to be scanned can be specified as a list of
- hostnames (fully qualified domain names), e.g.
github.com
, - ip addresses, e.g.
1.1.1.1
, - ip networks in CIDR format, e.g.
10.0.0.0/24
, - ip ranges, e.g.
10.0.0.1-10.0.0.10
, - or any combination of the previous.
- hostnames (fully qualified domain names), e.g.
- Connect to target hosts via an http proxy (optional).
- Results will be presented in various output formats:
--table
,--json
,--yaml
,--csv
,--raw
.
You can download and install the latest version of this software from the Python package index (PyPI) as follows:
$ pip install ssl_certinfo
When you install ssl_certinfo, a command-line script called ssl_certinfo
is
placed on your path. You can invoke ssl_certinfo directly via this script from the command line:
$ ssl_certinfo [...]
You can also invoke it through the Python interpreter from the command line:
$ python -m ssl_certinfo [...]
Help is available with the --help
or -h
switch:
$ ssl_certinfo -h usage: ssl_certinfo [-h] [-V] [-v | -q] [-p PORT] [-t TIMEOUT] [-x [protocol://]host[:port]] [-T | -j | -y | -c | -r] [host [host ...]] Collect information about SSL certificates from a set of hosts positional arguments: host Connect to HOST optional arguments: -h, --help show this help message and exit -V, --version display version information and exit -v, --verbose verbose output (repeat for increased verbosity) -q, --quiet quiet output (show errors only) -p PORT, --port PORT TCP port to connnect to [0-65535] -t TIMEOUT, --timeout TIMEOUT Maximum time allowed for connection -x [protocol://]host[:port], --proxy [protocol://]host[:port] Use the specified proxy -T, --table Print results in table format -j, --json Print results in JSON format -y, --yaml Print results in YAML format -c, --csv Print results in CSV format -r, --raw Print results in raw format
Optionally an http proxy can be specified which will be used to connect to the target hosts. The proxy can be
specified using the -x, --proxy
option or using one of the following environment variables:
http_proxy
HTTP_PROXY
https_proxy
HTTPS_PROXY
The environment variables can be specified in lower case or upper case. The lower case version has precedence.
The -x, --proxy
option overrides existing environment variables that set the proxy to use.
If there's an environment variable setting a proxy, you can use -x ""
to override it.
This package was created with Cookiecutter and the stdtom/cookiecutter-pypackage-pipenv project template, based on audreyr/cookiecutter-pypackage.