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Command: BIO_s_connect | Section: 3 | Source: OpenBSD | File: BIO_s_connect.3
BIO_S_CONNECT(3) FreeBSD Library Functions Manual BIO_S_CONNECT(3)
NAME
BIO_s_connect, BIO_new_connect, BIO_set_conn_hostname, BIO_set_conn_port,
BIO_set_conn_ip, BIO_set_conn_int_port, BIO_get_conn_hostname,
BIO_get_conn_port, BIO_get_conn_ip, BIO_get_conn_int_port, BIO_set_nbio,
BIO_do_connect - connect BIO
SYNOPSIS
#include <openssl/bio.h>
const BIO_METHOD *
BIO_s_connect(void);
BIO *
BIO_new_connect(const char *name);
long
BIO_set_conn_hostname(BIO *b, char *name);
long
BIO_set_conn_port(BIO *b, char *port);
long
BIO_set_conn_ip(BIO *b, char *ip);
long
BIO_set_conn_int_port(BIO *b, char *port);
char *
BIO_get_conn_hostname(BIO *b);
char *
BIO_get_conn_port(BIO *b);
char *
BIO_get_conn_ip(BIO *b);
long
BIO_get_conn_int_port(BIO *b);
long
BIO_set_nbio(BIO *b, long n);
long
BIO_do_connect(BIO *b);
DESCRIPTION
BIO_s_connect() returns the connect BIO method. This is a wrapper around
the platform's TCP/IP socket connection routines.
Using connect BIOs, TCP/IP connections can be made and data transferred
using only BIO routines. In this way any platform specific operations
are hidden by the BIO abstraction.
Read and write operations on a connect BIO will perform I/O on the
underlying connection. If no connection is established and the port and
hostname (see below) is set up properly, then a connection is established
first.
Connect BIOs support BIO_puts(3) but not BIO_gets(3).
If the close flag is set on a connect BIO, then any active connection is
shutdown and the socket closed when the BIO is freed.
Calling BIO_reset(3) on a connect BIO will close any active connection
and reset the BIO into a state where it can connect to the same host
again.
BIO_get_fd(3) places the underlying socket in c if it is not NULL and
also returns the socket. If c is not NULL, it should be of type int *.
BIO_set_info_callback(3) and BIO_callback_ctrl(3) with a cmd of
BIO_CTRL_SET_CALLBACK save the pointer to the cb function internally in b
and BIO_get_info_callback(3) retrieves this function pointer. If such an
info callback is installed, it is invoked whenever a state change or
error occurs in the connect BIO state machine. The arguments of the
callback include the new state in case of a state change or the old state
in case of an error and the value res that the state machine would return
to whatever operation invoked it if no info callback had been installed.
If an info callback is installed, the state machine returns the return
value of the info callback instead. Consequently, the info callback is
supposed to usually return res. The precise effect of the return value
depends on which operation the state machine was invoked from. Usually,
-1 is used to indicate failure and return values less than or equal to
zero abort the operation in question, whereas positive values indicate
success and allow the operation to proceed.
The state constants passed to the callback are named according to which
operation needs to be performed next. They are listed here in the order
the states are passed through:
BIO_CONN_S_BEFORE The BIO is idle and no connection has been
initiated yet.
BIO_CONN_S_GET_IP The hostname to connect to needs to be
converted to an IP address.
BIO_CONN_S_GET_PORT The service name to connect to needs to be
converted to a TCP port number.
BIO_CONN_S_CREATE_SOCKET The TCP socket needs to be created with
the socket(2) system call.
BIO_CONN_S_NBIO Socket options may need to be set using
fcntl(2) and setsockopt(2).
BIO_CONN_S_CONNECT The connection needs to be initiated with
the connect(2) system call.
BIO_CONN_S_BLOCKED_CONNECT The connect(2) system call would have
blocked and needs to be tried again.
BIO_CONN_S_OK The connection has been established and
can now be used to transfer data.
BIO_set_conn_hostname() uses the string name to set the hostname. The
hostname can be an IP address. The hostname can also include the port in
the form hostname:port. It is also acceptable to use the forms
hostname/any/other/path or hostname:port/any/other/path.
BIO_set_conn_port() sets the port to port. port is looked up as a
service using getaddrinfo(3).
BIO_set_conn_ip() sets the IP address to ip using binary form i.e. four
bytes specifying the IP address in big-endian form.
BIO_set_conn_int_port() sets the port using port. port should be of type
int *.
BIO_get_conn_hostname() returns the hostname of the connect BIO or NULL
if the BIO is initialized but no hostname is set. This return value is
an internal pointer which should not be modified.
BIO_get_conn_port() returns the port as a string. This return value is
an internal pointer which should not be modified.
BIO_get_conn_ip() returns the IP address in binary form.
BIO_get_conn_int_port() returns the port as an int.
BIO_set_nbio() sets the non-blocking I/O flag to n. If n is zero then
blocking I/O is set. If n is 1 then non-blocking I/O is set. Blocking
I/O is the default. The call to BIO_set_nbio() should be made before the
connection is established because non-blocking I/O is set during the
connect process.
BIO_new_connect() combines BIO_new(3) and BIO_set_conn_hostname() into a
single call. It creates a new connect BIO with name.
BIO_do_connect() attempts to connect the supplied BIO. It returns 1 if
the connection was established successfully. A zero or negative value is
returned if the connection could not be established. The call
BIO_should_retry(3) should be used for non-blocking connect BIOs to
determine if the call should be retried.
If blocking I/O is set then a non-positive return value from any I/O call
is caused by an error condition, although a zero return will normally
mean that the connection was closed.
If the port name is supplied as part of the host name then this will
override any value set with BIO_set_conn_port(). This may be undesirable
if the application does not wish to allow connection to arbitrary ports.
This can be avoided by checking for the presence of the `:' character in
the passed hostname and either indicating an error or truncating the
string at that point.
The values returned by BIO_get_conn_hostname(), BIO_get_conn_port(),
BIO_get_conn_ip(), and BIO_get_conn_int_port() are updated when a
connection attempt is made. Before any connection attempt the values
returned are those set by the application itself.
Applications do not have to call BIO_do_connect() but may wish to do so
to separate the connection process from other I/O processing.
If non-blocking I/O is set, then retries will be requested as
appropriate.
In addition to BIO_should_read(3) and BIO_should_write(3) it is also
possible for BIO_should_io_special(3) to be true during the initial
connection process with the reason BIO_RR_CONNECT. If this is returned,
it is an indication that a connection attempt would block. The
application should then take appropriate action to wait until the
underlying socket has connected and retry the call.
When a chain containing a connect BIO is copied with BIO_dup_chain(3),
BIO_set_conn_hostname(), BIO_set_conn_port(), BIO_set_nbio(), and
BIO_set_info_callback(3) are called internally to automatically copy the
hostname, port, non-blocking I/O flag, and info callback from the
original BIO object to the new one.
BIO_ctrl(3) cmd and larg arguments correspond to macros as follows:
cmd constant larg corresponding macro
BIO_C_DO_STATE_MACHINE 0 BIO_do_connect()
BIO_C_GET_CONNECT 0 BIO_get_conn_hostname()
1 BIO_get_conn_port()
2 BIO_get_conn_ip()
3 BIO_get_conn_int_port()
BIO_C_GET_FD 0 BIO_get_fd(3)
BIO_C_SET_CONNECT 0 BIO_set_conn_hostname()
1 BIO_set_conn_port()
2 BIO_set_conn_ip()
3 BIO_set_conn_int_port()
BIO_C_SET_NBIO n BIO_set_nbio()
BIO_CTRL_GET_CLOSE 0 BIO_get_close(3)
BIO_CTRL_RESET 0 BIO_reset(3)
BIO_CTRL_SET_CLOSE flag BIO_set_close(3)
RETURN VALUES
BIO_s_connect() returns the connect BIO method.
When called on a connect BIO object, BIO_method_type(3) returns the
constant BIO_TYPE_CONNECT and BIO_method_name(3) returns a pointer to the
static string "socket connect".
BIO_get_fd(3) returns the socket or -1 if the BIO has not been
initialized.
BIO_set_conn_hostname(), BIO_set_conn_port(), BIO_set_conn_ip(), and
BIO_set_conn_int_port() always return 1.
BIO_get_conn_hostname() returns the connected hostname or NULL if none is
set.
BIO_get_conn_port() returns a string representing the connected port or
NULL if not set.
BIO_get_conn_ip() returns a pointer to the connected IP address in binary
form or all zeros if not set.
BIO_get_conn_int_port() returns the connected port or 0 if none was set.
BIO_set_nbio() always returns 1.
BIO_do_connect() returns 1 if the connection was successfully established
and 0 or -1 if the connection failed.
EXAMPLES
This example connects to a webserver on the local host and attempts to
retrieve a page and copy the result to standard output.
BIO *cbio, *out;
int len;
char tmpbuf[1024];
ERR_load_crypto_strings();
cbio = BIO_new_connect("localhost:http");
out = BIO_new_fp(stdout, BIO_NOCLOSE);
if (BIO_do_connect(cbio) <= 0) {
fprintf(stderr, "Error connecting to server\n");
ERR_print_errors_fp(stderr);
/* whatever ... */
}
BIO_puts(cbio, "GET / HTTP/1.0\n\n");
for(;;) {
len = BIO_read(cbio, tmpbuf, 1024);
if (len <= 0)
break;
BIO_write(out, tmpbuf, len);
}
BIO_free(cbio);
BIO_free(out);
SEE ALSO
BIO_new(3)
HISTORY
BIO_s_connect(), BIO_new_connect(), BIO_set_nbio(), and BIO_do_connect()
first appeared in SSLeay 0.8.0. BIO_set_conn_hostname(),
BIO_set_conn_port(), BIO_set_conn_ip(), BIO_set_conn_int_port(),
BIO_get_conn_hostname(), BIO_get_conn_port(), BIO_get_conn_ip(), and
BIO_get_conn_int_port() first appeared in SSLeay 0.9.0. All these
functions have been available since OpenBSD 2.4.
FreeBSD 14.1-RELEASE-p8 April 30, 2023 FreeBSD 14.1-RELEASE-p8