HTTP server agnostic Python implementation of the server side of the IETF draft "Signing HTTP Messages", with no dependencies other than the Python standard library, although cryptography would typically be used in client code to verify signatures using a public key.
See http-signature-client for a compatible client-side implementation.
pip install http-signature-serverfrom http_signature_server import verify
def verify(key_id, signature, signature_input):
    # If the key_id is not found, return None
    # If the key_id is found and the signature verifies the input, return True
    # If the key_is is found and the signature does not verify the input, return False
error, (key_id, verified_headers) = verify_headers(verify, max_skew, method, path, headers)
if error is not None:
    # Return error or raise exception as neededfrom cryptography.exceptions import InvalidSignature
from cryptography.hazmat.backends import default_backend
from cryptography.hazmat.primitives.serialization import load_pem_public_key
public_key = \
    b'-----BEGIN PUBLIC KEY-----\n' \
    b'MCowBQYDK2VwAyEAe9+zIz+CH9E++J0qiE6aS657qzxsNWIEf2BZcUAQF94=\n' \
    b'-----END PUBLIC KEY-----\n'
public_key = load_pem_public_key(public_key, backend=default_backend())
def verify(key_id, signature, signature_input):
    # Could use the supplied key_id to lookup the public key
    try:
        public_key.verify(signature, signature_input)
    except InvalidSignature:
        return False
    return True
# method, path, and headers would be taken from the incoming HTTP request
error, (key_id, verified_headers) = verify_headers(verify, 10, method, path, headers)from cryptography.hazmat.primitives.asymmetric.ed25519 import Ed25519PrivateKey
from cryptography.hazmat.primitives.serialization import Encoding, NoEncryption, PrivateFormat, PublicFormat
private_key = Ed25519PrivateKey.generate()
print(private_key.private_bytes(encoding=Encoding.PEM, format=PrivateFormat.PKCS8, encryption_algorithm=NoEncryption()))
print(private_key.public_key().public_bytes(encoding=Encoding.PEM, format=PublicFormat.SubjectPublicKeyInfo))- 
verify- A callable taking astrkey_idandbytessignatureandsignature_input. It must returnTrueifkey_idis known andsignature/signature_inputis verified, for example by a corresponding public key; returnFalseifkey_idis known but thesignature/signature_inputis not verified; returnNoneotherwise.
- 
max_skew- A maximum integer number of seconds difference from the time an incoming signature claimed to be constructed, and the current time.
- 
method- The HTTP method of the request, such asGETorPOST.
- 
path- The full path of the request, including any query string.
- 
headers- A tuple of (key, value) pairs of HTTP headers to attempt to verify.
A tuple error, (key_id, verified_headers).
- 
error- If the request is verified,None. Otherwise astrcontaining a short reason in English as to why verification failed.
- 
key_id- If the request is verified, thekeyIdfrom the incoming request. Otherwise,None.
- 
verified_headers- If the request is verified, the (key, value) HTTP header pairs that were verified by the signature; this will be a sub-tuple of theheadersparameter. Otherwise,None.
A deliberate subset of the signature algorithm is implemented/enforced:
- the (request-target)pseudo-header is required and verified;
- the createdparameter is required, and the corresponding(created)pseudo-header must be signed;
- the headersparameter is required;
- the expiresparameter, if sent, must not correspond to a signed(expires)pseudo-header;
- the algorithmparameter is ignored if sent.
There are a few places where the implementation is technically, and deliberately, non-conforming.
- 
The (created)pseudo-header: if this is in the future from the server's point of view, even 1 second, according to the spec verification should fail. Instead, there is a configurable maximum time skew that applies to the future as well as the past.
- 
The expiresparameter: if this is sent and in the past from the server's point of view, according to the spec verification should fail.
- 
The algorithmparameter: if it's sent but does not match what the server expects, according to the spec verification should fail.
It is assumed that the (created) and (request-target) pseudo-headers were prepended to the list of real HTTP headers before canonicalisation at the client. This fact only makes a difference in the edge case of real HTTP headers called (created) or (request-target).