BIO_read.pod 2.8 KB

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  1. =pod
  2. =head1 NAME
  3. BIO_read, BIO_write, BIO_gets, BIO_puts - BIO I/O functions
  4. =head1 SYNOPSIS
  5. #include <openssl/bio.h>
  6. int BIO_read(BIO *b, void *buf, int len);
  7. int BIO_gets(BIO *b, char *buf, int size);
  8. int BIO_write(BIO *b, const void *buf, int len);
  9. int BIO_puts(BIO *b, const char *buf);
  10. =head1 DESCRIPTION
  11. BIO_read() attempts to read B<len> bytes from BIO B<b> and places
  12. the data in B<buf>.
  13. BIO_gets() performs the BIOs "gets" operation and places the data
  14. in B<buf>. Usually this operation will attempt to read a line of data
  15. from the BIO of maximum length B<len-1>. There are exceptions to this,
  16. however; for example, BIO_gets() on a digest BIO will calculate and
  17. return the digest and other BIOs may not support BIO_gets() at all.
  18. The returned string is always NUL-terminated.
  19. BIO_write() attempts to write B<len> bytes from B<buf> to BIO B<b>.
  20. BIO_puts() attempts to write a NUL-terminated string B<buf> to BIO B<b>.
  21. =head1 RETURN VALUES
  22. All these functions return either the amount of data successfully read or
  23. written (if the return value is positive) or that no data was successfully
  24. read or written if the result is 0 or -1. If the return value is -2 then
  25. the operation is not implemented in the specific BIO type. The trailing
  26. NUL is not included in the length returned by BIO_gets().
  27. =head1 NOTES
  28. A 0 or -1 return is not necessarily an indication of an error. In
  29. particular when the source/sink is non-blocking or of a certain type
  30. it may merely be an indication that no data is currently available and that
  31. the application should retry the operation later.
  32. One technique sometimes used with blocking sockets is to use a system call
  33. (such as select(), poll() or equivalent) to determine when data is available
  34. and then call read() to read the data. The equivalent with BIOs (that is call
  35. select() on the underlying I/O structure and then call BIO_read() to
  36. read the data) should B<not> be used because a single call to BIO_read()
  37. can cause several reads (and writes in the case of SSL BIOs) on the underlying
  38. I/O structure and may block as a result. Instead select() (or equivalent)
  39. should be combined with non blocking I/O so successive reads will request
  40. a retry instead of blocking.
  41. See L<BIO_should_retry(3)> for details of how to
  42. determine the cause of a retry and other I/O issues.
  43. If the BIO_gets() function is not supported by a BIO then it possible to
  44. work around this by adding a buffering BIO L<BIO_f_buffer(3)>
  45. to the chain.
  46. =head1 SEE ALSO
  47. L<BIO_should_retry(3)>
  48. =head1 COPYRIGHT
  49. Copyright 2000-2016 The OpenSSL Project Authors. All Rights Reserved.
  50. Licensed under the OpenSSL license (the "License"). You may not use
  51. this file except in compliance with the License. You can obtain a copy
  52. in the file LICENSE in the source distribution or at
  53. L<https://www.openssl.org/source/license.html>.
  54. =cut