By default most systems allow SSL 3.0, TLS 1.0, 1.2 and 1.2 to be used.
TLS 1.2 is the most secure version of SSL/TLS protocols. It is easy to force the connection to use it. All you need to do is to set Ftp.SSLConfiguration.EnabledSslProtocols property to SslProtocols.Tls12:
// C#
using (Ftp ftp = new Ftp())
{
ftp.SSLConfiguration.EnabledSslProtocols = SslProtocols.Tls12;
ftp.ConnectSSL("ftps.example.com");
ftp.Login("user","password");
ftp.ChangeFolder("uploads");
ftp.Upload("report.txt", @"c:\report.txt");
ftp.Close();
}
' VB.NET
Using ftp As New Ftp()
ftp.SSLConfiguration.EnabledSslProtocols = SslProtocols.Tls12
ftp.ConnectSSL("ftps.example.com")
ftp.Login("user", "password")
ftp.ChangeFolder("uploads")
ftp.Upload("report.txt", "c:\report.txt")
ftp.Close()
End Using
For explicit SSL/TLS, code is almost the same. You first connect to non-secure port (21) and secure the connection using Ftp.AuthTLS command:
// C#
using (Ftp ftp = new Ftp())
{
ftp.SSLConfiguration.EnabledSslProtocols = SslProtocols.Tls12;
ftp.Connect("ftp.example.com");
ftp.AuthTLS();
ftp.Login("user","password");
ftp.ChangeFolder("uploads");
ftp.Upload("report.txt", @"c:\report.txt");
ftp.Close();
}
' VB.NET
Using ftp As New Ftp()
ftp.SSLConfiguration.EnabledSslProtocols = SslProtocols.Tls12
ftp.Connect("ftp.example.com")
ftp.AuthTLS()
ftp.Login("user", "password")
ftp.ChangeFolder("uploads")
ftp.Upload("report.txt", "c:\report.txt")
ftp.Close()
End Using
To use TLS 1.2 .NET Framework 4.5+ must be installed on your machine and you application should target .NET 4.5+.
It is possible to use TLS 1.2 in applications targeting .NET <4.5, but 4.5 must be installed on the machine. After you have .NET 4.5 installed, your 2.0-4.0 apps will use the 4.5 System.dll and you can enable TLS 1.2 using this code: [csharp] ftp.SSLConfiguration.EnabledSslProtocols = (SecurityProtocolType)3072; [/csharp]