/TLS-update

Documentation & tools for the upcoming TLSv1.2 required update

Primary LanguageJava

TLSv1.2 Requirement

The Payment Card Industry (PCI) Council has mandated that early versions of TLS be retired from service. All organizations that handle credit card information are required to comply with this standard. As part of this obligation, PayPal is updating its services to require TLS 1.2 for all HTTPS connections. At this time, PayPal will also require HTTP/1.1 for all connections.

You may find more official relevant information at the PayPal Technical Support website:

What does this mean for PayPal merchants?

Merchants should verify that all of their systems are capable of using the TLSv1.2 protocol with a SHA-256 certificate. In most cases this means ensuring that you are up to date with security updates, including current versions of operating systems, encryption libraries, and runtime environments.

PayPal is making this upgrade alongside the rest of the payments industry. All credit card processors must make these changes by the PCI deadline, so you should expect to see similar announcements from other payment providers you might use.

To help merchants get started, we've put together a few notes for common environments. These checks assume that you have installed all the libraries required by the PayPal REST SDKs. For these checks to be valid, they must be run on a production system or one that exactly matches the configuration you have in production.

Java

  • The TLS version can be set via SSLContext.
  • The latest Java (currently 8) is preferred. In Java 8, TLSv1.2 is used by default when a TLS version is not specified.
Java version TLSv1.2 support
5 and earlier No support.
6 Available. TLSv1.2 must be explicitly enabled. Requires at least Oracle Java version 6u115 b32 or IBM V6 service refresh 10. A PayPal SDK update or code change may be required.
7 Available. TLSv1.2 must be explicitly enabled. A PayPal SDK update or code change may be required.
8 Default. TLSv1.2 is enabled by default. No code change is required, though it is always recommended to make sure you're using the latest PayPal SDK.

To check Java, first verify that Java runtime 6 or higher is installed by running java -version from command line. If you have Java 5 or below, please upgrade it first. Then download the provided test application. And in a shell on your production system, run: > java -jar TlsCheck.jar

  • On success, PayPal_Connection_OK is printed.
  • On failure a networking exception will be thrown.

PayPal Java SDK support

SDK TLSv1.2 support version
REST Java-SDK 1.4.0
sdk-core 1.7.0
adaptivepayments 2.9.117
adaptiveaccounts 2.6.106
invoice 2.7.117
buttonmanager 2.7.106
permissions 2.6.109
merchant (merchant 2.x) 2.14.117
legacy (merchant 1.x) 1.1.0

.NET

The .NET 4.5 (or greater) runtime must be installed for TLSv1.2 to be enabled.

To check .NET, first verify you have .NET framework 4.5 or higher by running NetFrameworkVersions on the console of your production system. If you do not have .NET 4.5 or above, please upgrade it first.

Then, run TlsCheck in a shell on your production system: > TlsCheck.exe

  • On success, PayPal_Connection_OK is printed.

PayPal .NET SDK support

SDK TLSv1.2 support version
REST NET-SDK 1.7.3
sdk-core 1.7.1
adaptivepayments Requires sdk-core 1.7.1 or later
adaptiveaccounts Requires sdk-core 1.7.1 or later
invoice Requires sdk-core 1.7.1 or later
buttonmanager Requires sdk-core 1.7.1 or later
permissions Requires sdk-core 1.7.1 or later
merchant (merchant 2.x) Requires sdk-core 1.7.1 or later
legacy (merchant 1.x) Not supported - please upgrade to merchant 2.x

PHP

PHP uses the system supplied CURL library. OpenSSL used by CURL library is required to be 1.0.1c or higher. You may also need to update your SSL/TLS libraries, see here for more details.

To check PHP, in a shell on your production system, run:

$ php -r '$ch = curl_init(); curl_setopt($ch, CURLOPT_URL, "https://tlstest.paypal.com/"); var_dump(curl_exec($ch));'

  • On success, PayPal_Connection_OK is printed.
  • On failure, bool(false) will be printed.

You can get the specific error with curl_error($ch):

php -r '$ch = curl_init(); curl_setopt($ch, CURLOPT_URL, "https://tlstest.paypal.com/"); var_dump(curl_exec($ch)); var_dump(curl_error($ch));'

Note: Please make sure that your command line test is using the same versions of PHP & SSL/TLS libraries as your web server Note: If you are using MAMP or XAMPP as your development setup, currently the PHP packaged with them comes with a lower version of OpenSSL, which currently cannot be updated easily. You can find more information on this issue and find a temporary workaround here

Python

Python uses the system supplied OpenSSL. TLSv1.2 requires OpenSSL 1.0.1c or higher.

To check Python, in a shell on your production system, run:

For Python 2.x:

$ python -c "import urllib2; print(urllib2.urlopen('https://tlstest.paypal.com/').read())"

For Python 3.x:

$ python -c "import urllib.request; print(urllib.request.urlopen('https://tlstest.paypal.com/').read())"

  • On success, PayPal_Connection_OK is printed.
  • On failure, an URLError will be raised:
    urllib2.URLError: <urlopen error EOF occurred in violation of protocol (_ssl.c:590)> urllib2.URLError: <urlopen error [Errno 54] Connection reset by peer>

Ruby

Ruby 2.0.0 or above is required to use the TLSv1.2 capability of the system supplied OpenSSL. OpenSSL 1.0.1c is the first version that supplies TLSv1.2. That is, both Ruby > 2.0.0 and OpenSSL > 1.0.1c are required. Then, run bundle update to update your dependencies.

For legacy Ruby SDK (such that was packaged in PP_Ruby_NVP_SDK.zip), download this SDK

To check Ruby, in a shell on your production system, run:

$ ruby -r'net/HTTP' -e 'uri = URI("https://tlstest.paypal.com/"); puts Net::HTTP.get(uri)'

  • On success, PayPal_Connection_OK will be printed.
  • On failure, a OpenSSL::SSL::SSLError or EOFError will be thrown.

Node.js

Node uses OpenSSL. TLSv1.2 requires OpenSSL 1.0.1c or higher.

To check Node, in a shell on your production system, run:

$ node -e "var https = require('https'); https.get('https://tlstest.paypal.com/', function(res){ console.log(res.statusCode) });"

  • On success, 200 is printed.
  • On failure, a network error is printed.

Native Mobile Apps

Android

TLSv1.2 was made default for client connections in API 20 (Android 4.4W "KitKat - wearable extensions").

All Android app developers will want to make sure their code and PayPal SDK provide explicit support for TLSv1.2. Apps should be tested on Android 4.1-4.4 (API 16-19) devices to verify correct implementation.

After the TLSv1.2 upgrade, native app support for user devices older than API 16 (Android 4.1 "Jelly Bean") will not be available. Fortunately, as of May 2, 2016, Google reports 4.3% of devices accessing the Play store are API 15 or earlier.

Users of the PayPal SDK should simply update to the latest version. Outside the SDK, we've provided an example Android app to illustrate how to support TLSv1.2.

PayPal SDK support

SDK TLSv1.2 support version
Android SDK 2.13.0
MPL 1.5.6_49

iOS

TLSv1.2 support was introduced in iOS 5. The PayPal iOS SDK requires iOS 7 or higher. Apps built since 2013 will likely not need any updates.

Windows

PayPal has discontinued SDK support for native Windows Phone apps. The related backend services will be shut down soon. Please update to a web browser integration. We recommend Braintree v.zero for JavaScript.