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- /*
- * Copyright 2023 The OpenSSL Project Authors. All Rights Reserved.
- *
- * Licensed under the Apache License 2.0 (the "License"). You may not use
- * this file except in compliance with the License. You can obtain a copy
- * in the file LICENSE in the source distribution or at
- * https://www.openssl.org/source/license.html
- */
- /*
- * NB: Changes to this file should also be reflected in
- * doc/man7/ossl-guide-quic-multi-stream.pod
- */
- #include <string.h>
- /* Include the appropriate header file for SOCK_DGRAM */
- #ifdef _WIN32 /* Windows */
- # include <winsock2.h>
- #else /* Linux/Unix */
- # include <sys/socket.h>
- #endif
- #include <openssl/bio.h>
- #include <openssl/ssl.h>
- #include <openssl/err.h>
- /* Helper function to create a BIO connected to the server */
- static BIO *create_socket_bio(const char *hostname, const char *port,
- int family, BIO_ADDR **peer_addr)
- {
- int sock = -1;
- BIO_ADDRINFO *res;
- const BIO_ADDRINFO *ai = NULL;
- BIO *bio;
- /*
- * Lookup IP address info for the server.
- */
- if (!BIO_lookup_ex(hostname, port, BIO_LOOKUP_CLIENT, family, SOCK_DGRAM, 0,
- &res))
- return NULL;
- /*
- * Loop through all the possible addresses for the server and find one
- * we can connect to.
- */
- for (ai = res; ai != NULL; ai = BIO_ADDRINFO_next(ai)) {
- /*
- * Create a UDP socket. We could equally use non-OpenSSL calls such
- * as "socket" here for this and the subsequent connect and close
- * functions. But for portability reasons and also so that we get
- * errors on the OpenSSL stack in the event of a failure we use
- * OpenSSL's versions of these functions.
- */
- sock = BIO_socket(BIO_ADDRINFO_family(ai), SOCK_DGRAM, 0, 0);
- if (sock == -1)
- continue;
- /* Connect the socket to the server's address */
- if (!BIO_connect(sock, BIO_ADDRINFO_address(ai), 0)) {
- BIO_closesocket(sock);
- sock = -1;
- continue;
- }
- /* Set to nonblocking mode */
- if (!BIO_socket_nbio(sock, 1)) {
- BIO_closesocket(sock);
- sock = -1;
- continue;
- }
- break;
- }
- if (sock != -1) {
- *peer_addr = BIO_ADDR_dup(BIO_ADDRINFO_address(ai));
- if (*peer_addr == NULL) {
- BIO_closesocket(sock);
- return NULL;
- }
- }
- /* Free the address information resources we allocated earlier */
- BIO_ADDRINFO_free(res);
- /* If sock is -1 then we've been unable to connect to the server */
- if (sock == -1)
- return NULL;
- /* Create a BIO to wrap the socket */
- bio = BIO_new(BIO_s_datagram());
- if (bio == NULL) {
- BIO_closesocket(sock);
- return NULL;
- }
- /*
- * Associate the newly created BIO with the underlying socket. By
- * passing BIO_CLOSE here the socket will be automatically closed when
- * the BIO is freed. Alternatively you can use BIO_NOCLOSE, in which
- * case you must close the socket explicitly when it is no longer
- * needed.
- */
- BIO_set_fd(bio, sock, BIO_CLOSE);
- return bio;
- }
- static int write_a_request(SSL *stream, const char *request_start,
- const char *hostname)
- {
- const char *request_end = "\r\n\r\n";
- size_t written;
- if (!SSL_write_ex(stream, request_start, strlen(request_start),
- &written))
- return 0;
- if (!SSL_write_ex(stream, hostname, strlen(hostname), &written))
- return 0;
- if (!SSL_write_ex(stream, request_end, strlen(request_end), &written))
- return 0;
- return 1;
- }
- /*
- * Simple application to send basic HTTP/1.0 requests to a server and print the
- * response on the screen. Note that HTTP/1.0 over QUIC is not a real protocol
- * and will not be supported by real world servers. This is for demonstration
- * purposes only.
- */
- int main(int argc, char *argv[])
- {
- SSL_CTX *ctx = NULL;
- SSL *ssl = NULL;
- SSL *stream1 = NULL, *stream2 = NULL, *stream3 = NULL;
- BIO *bio = NULL;
- int res = EXIT_FAILURE;
- int ret;
- unsigned char alpn[] = { 8, 'h', 't', 't', 'p', '/', '1', '.', '0' };
- const char *request1_start =
- "GET /request1.html HTTP/1.0\r\nConnection: close\r\nHost: ";
- const char *request2_start =
- "GET /request2.html HTTP/1.0\r\nConnection: close\r\nHost: ";
- size_t readbytes;
- char buf[160];
- BIO_ADDR *peer_addr = NULL;
- char *hostname, *port;
- int argnext = 1;
- int ipv6 = 0;
- if (argc < 3) {
- printf("Usage: quic-client-non-block [-6] hostname port\n");
- goto end;
- }
- if (!strcmp(argv[argnext], "-6")) {
- if (argc < 4) {
- printf("Usage: quic-client-non-block [-6] hostname port\n");
- goto end;
- }
- ipv6 = 1;
- argnext++;
- }
- hostname = argv[argnext++];
- port = argv[argnext];
- /*
- * Create an SSL_CTX which we can use to create SSL objects from. We
- * want an SSL_CTX for creating clients so we use
- * OSSL_QUIC_client_method() here.
- */
- ctx = SSL_CTX_new(OSSL_QUIC_client_method());
- if (ctx == NULL) {
- printf("Failed to create the SSL_CTX\n");
- goto end;
- }
- /*
- * Configure the client to abort the handshake if certificate
- * verification fails. Virtually all clients should do this unless you
- * really know what you are doing.
- */
- SSL_CTX_set_verify(ctx, SSL_VERIFY_PEER, NULL);
- /* Use the default trusted certificate store */
- if (!SSL_CTX_set_default_verify_paths(ctx)) {
- printf("Failed to set the default trusted certificate store\n");
- goto end;
- }
- /* Create an SSL object to represent the TLS connection */
- ssl = SSL_new(ctx);
- if (ssl == NULL) {
- printf("Failed to create the SSL object\n");
- goto end;
- }
- /*
- * We will use multiple streams so we will disable the default stream mode.
- * This is not a requirement for using multiple streams but is recommended.
- */
- if (!SSL_set_default_stream_mode(ssl, SSL_DEFAULT_STREAM_MODE_NONE)) {
- printf("Failed to disable the default stream mode\n");
- goto end;
- }
- /*
- * Create the underlying transport socket/BIO and associate it with the
- * connection.
- */
- bio = create_socket_bio(hostname, port, ipv6 ? AF_INET6 : AF_INET, &peer_addr);
- if (bio == NULL) {
- printf("Failed to crete the BIO\n");
- goto end;
- }
- SSL_set_bio(ssl, bio, bio);
- /*
- * Tell the server during the handshake which hostname we are attempting
- * to connect to in case the server supports multiple hosts.
- */
- if (!SSL_set_tlsext_host_name(ssl, hostname)) {
- printf("Failed to set the SNI hostname\n");
- goto end;
- }
- /*
- * Ensure we check during certificate verification that the server has
- * supplied a certificate for the hostname that we were expecting.
- * Virtually all clients should do this unless you really know what you
- * are doing.
- */
- if (!SSL_set1_host(ssl, hostname)) {
- printf("Failed to set the certificate verification hostname");
- goto end;
- }
- /* SSL_set_alpn_protos returns 0 for success! */
- if (SSL_set_alpn_protos(ssl, alpn, sizeof(alpn)) != 0) {
- printf("Failed to set the ALPN for the connection\n");
- goto end;
- }
- /* Set the IP address of the remote peer */
- if (!SSL_set1_initial_peer_addr(ssl, peer_addr)) {
- printf("Failed to set the initial peer address\n");
- goto end;
- }
- /* Do the handshake with the server */
- if (SSL_connect(ssl) < 1) {
- printf("Failed to connect to the server\n");
- /*
- * If the failure is due to a verification error we can get more
- * information about it from SSL_get_verify_result().
- */
- if (SSL_get_verify_result(ssl) != X509_V_OK)
- printf("Verify error: %s\n",
- X509_verify_cert_error_string(SSL_get_verify_result(ssl)));
- goto end;
- }
- /*
- * We create two new client initiated streams. The first will be
- * bi-directional, and the second will be uni-directional.
- */
- stream1 = SSL_new_stream(ssl, 0);
- stream2 = SSL_new_stream(ssl, SSL_STREAM_FLAG_UNI);
- if (stream1 == NULL || stream2 == NULL) {
- printf("Failed to create streams\n");
- goto end;
- }
- /* Write an HTTP GET request on each of our streams to the peer */
- if (!write_a_request(stream1, request1_start, hostname)) {
- printf("Failed to write HTTP request on stream 1\n");
- goto end;
- }
- if (!write_a_request(stream2, request2_start, hostname)) {
- printf("Failed to write HTTP request on stream 2\n");
- goto end;
- }
- /*
- * In this demo we read all the data from one stream before reading all the
- * data from the next stream for simplicity. In practice there is no need to
- * do this. We can interleave IO on the different streams if we wish, or
- * manage the streams entirely separately on different threads.
- */
- printf("Stream 1 data:\n");
- /*
- * Get up to sizeof(buf) bytes of the response from stream 1 (which is a
- * bidirectional stream). We keep reading until the server closes the
- * connection.
- */
- while (SSL_read_ex(stream1, buf, sizeof(buf), &readbytes)) {
- /*
- * OpenSSL does not guarantee that the returned data is a string or
- * that it is NUL terminated so we use fwrite() to write the exact
- * number of bytes that we read. The data could be non-printable or
- * have NUL characters in the middle of it. For this simple example
- * we're going to print it to stdout anyway.
- */
- fwrite(buf, 1, readbytes, stdout);
- }
- /* In case the response didn't finish with a newline we add one now */
- printf("\n");
- /*
- * Check whether we finished the while loop above normally or as the
- * result of an error. The 0 argument to SSL_get_error() is the return
- * code we received from the SSL_read_ex() call. It must be 0 in order
- * to get here. Normal completion is indicated by SSL_ERROR_ZERO_RETURN. In
- * QUIC terms this means that the peer has sent FIN on the stream to
- * indicate that no further data will be sent.
- */
- switch (SSL_get_error(stream1, 0)) {
- case SSL_ERROR_ZERO_RETURN:
- /* Normal completion of the stream */
- break;
- case SSL_ERROR_SSL:
- /*
- * Some stream fatal error occurred. This could be because of a stream
- * reset - or some failure occurred on the underlying connection.
- */
- switch (SSL_get_stream_read_state(stream1)) {
- case SSL_STREAM_STATE_RESET_REMOTE:
- printf("Stream reset occurred\n");
- /* The stream has been reset but the connection is still healthy. */
- break;
- case SSL_STREAM_STATE_CONN_CLOSED:
- printf("Connection closed\n");
- /* Connection is already closed. Skip SSL_shutdown() */
- goto end;
- default:
- printf("Unknown stream failure\n");
- break;
- }
- break;
- default:
- /* Some other unexpected error occurred */
- printf ("Failed reading remaining data\n");
- break;
- }
- /*
- * In our hypothetical HTTP/1.0 over QUIC protocol that we are using we
- * assume that the server will respond with a server initiated stream
- * containing the data requested in our uni-directional stream. This doesn't
- * really make sense to do in a real protocol, but its just for
- * demonstration purposes.
- *
- * We're using blocking mode so this will block until a stream becomes
- * available. We could override this behaviour if we wanted to by setting
- * the SSL_ACCEPT_STREAM_NO_BLOCK flag in the second argument below.
- */
- stream3 = SSL_accept_stream(ssl, 0);
- if (stream3 == NULL) {
- printf("Failed to accept a new stream\n");
- goto end;
- }
- printf("Stream 3 data:\n");
- /*
- * Read the data from stream 3 like we did for stream 1 above. Note that
- * stream 2 was uni-directional so there is no data to be read from that
- * one.
- */
- while (SSL_read_ex(stream3, buf, sizeof(buf), &readbytes))
- fwrite(buf, 1, readbytes, stdout);
- printf("\n");
- /* Check for errors on the stream */
- switch (SSL_get_error(stream3, 0)) {
- case SSL_ERROR_ZERO_RETURN:
- /* Normal completion of the stream */
- break;
- case SSL_ERROR_SSL:
- switch (SSL_get_stream_read_state(stream3)) {
- case SSL_STREAM_STATE_RESET_REMOTE:
- printf("Stream reset occurred\n");
- break;
- case SSL_STREAM_STATE_CONN_CLOSED:
- printf("Connection closed\n");
- goto end;
- default:
- printf("Unknown stream failure\n");
- break;
- }
- break;
- default:
- printf ("Failed reading remaining data\n");
- break;
- }
- /*
- * Repeatedly call SSL_shutdown() until the connection is fully
- * closed.
- */
- do {
- ret = SSL_shutdown(ssl);
- if (ret < 0) {
- printf("Error shutting down: %d\n", ret);
- goto end;
- }
- } while (ret != 1);
- /* Success! */
- res = EXIT_SUCCESS;
- end:
- /*
- * If something bad happened then we will dump the contents of the
- * OpenSSL error stack to stderr. There might be some useful diagnostic
- * information there.
- */
- if (res == EXIT_FAILURE)
- ERR_print_errors_fp(stderr);
- /*
- * Free the resources we allocated. We do not free the BIO object here
- * because ownership of it was immediately transferred to the SSL object
- * via SSL_set_bio(). The BIO will be freed when we free the SSL object.
- */
- SSL_free(ssl);
- SSL_free(stream1);
- SSL_free(stream2);
- SSL_free(stream3);
- SSL_CTX_free(ctx);
- BIO_ADDR_free(peer_addr);
- return res;
- }
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