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- =pod
- =head1 NAME
- BIO_should_read, BIO_should_write,
- BIO_should_io_special, BIO_retry_type, BIO_should_retry,
- BIO_get_retry_BIO, BIO_get_retry_reason, BIO_set_retry_reason - BIO retry
- functions
- =head1 SYNOPSIS
- #include <openssl/bio.h>
- int BIO_should_read(BIO *b);
- int BIO_should_write(BIO *b);
- int BIO_should_io_special(iBIO *b);
- int BIO_retry_type(BIO *b);
- int BIO_should_retry(BIO *b);
- BIO *BIO_get_retry_BIO(BIO *bio, int *reason);
- int BIO_get_retry_reason(BIO *bio);
- void BIO_set_retry_reason(BIO *bio, int reason);
- =head1 DESCRIPTION
- These functions determine why a BIO is not able to read or write data.
- They will typically be called after a failed BIO_read_ex() or BIO_write_ex()
- call.
- BIO_should_retry() is true if the call that produced this condition
- should then be retried at a later time.
- If BIO_should_retry() is false then the cause is an error condition.
- BIO_should_read() is true if the cause of the condition is that a BIO
- needs to read data.
- BIO_should_write() is true if the cause of the condition is that a BIO
- needs to read data.
- BIO_should_io_special() is true if some "special" condition, that is a
- reason other than reading or writing is the cause of the condition.
- BIO_retry_type() returns a mask of the cause of a retry condition
- consisting of the values B<BIO_FLAGS_READ>, B<BIO_FLAGS_WRITE>,
- B<BIO_FLAGS_IO_SPECIAL> though current BIO types will only set one of
- these.
- BIO_get_retry_BIO() determines the precise reason for the special
- condition, it returns the BIO that caused this condition and if
- B<reason> is not NULL it contains the reason code. The meaning of
- the reason code and the action that should be taken depends on
- the type of BIO that resulted in this condition.
- BIO_get_retry_reason() returns the reason for a special condition if
- passed the relevant BIO, for example as returned by BIO_get_retry_BIO().
- BIO_set_retry_reason() sets the retry reason for a special condition for a given
- BIO. This would usually only be called by BIO implementations.
- =head1 NOTES
- BIO_should_read(), BIO_should_write(), BIO_should_io_special(),
- BIO_retry_type(), and BIO_should_retry(), are implemented as macros.
- If BIO_should_retry() returns false then the precise "error condition"
- depends on the BIO type that caused it and the return code of the BIO
- operation. For example if a call to BIO_read_ex() on a socket BIO returns
- 0 and BIO_should_retry() is false then the cause will be that the
- connection closed. A similar condition on a file BIO will mean that it
- has reached EOF. Some BIO types may place additional information on
- the error queue. For more details see the individual BIO type manual
- pages.
- If the underlying I/O structure is in a blocking mode almost all current
- BIO types will not request a retry, because the underlying I/O
- calls will not. If the application knows that the BIO type will never
- signal a retry then it need not call BIO_should_retry() after a failed
- BIO I/O call. This is typically done with file BIOs.
- SSL BIOs are the only current exception to this rule: they can request a
- retry even if the underlying I/O structure is blocking, if a handshake
- occurs during a call to BIO_read(). An application can retry the failed
- call immediately or avoid this situation by setting SSL_MODE_AUTO_RETRY
- on the underlying SSL structure.
- While an application may retry a failed non blocking call immediately
- this is likely to be very inefficient because the call will fail
- repeatedly until data can be processed or is available. An application
- will normally wait until the necessary condition is satisfied. How
- this is done depends on the underlying I/O structure.
- For example if the cause is ultimately a socket and BIO_should_read()
- is true then a call to select() may be made to wait until data is
- available and then retry the BIO operation. By combining the retry
- conditions of several non blocking BIOs in a single select() call
- it is possible to service several BIOs in a single thread, though
- the performance may be poor if SSL BIOs are present because long delays
- can occur during the initial handshake process.
- It is possible for a BIO to block indefinitely if the underlying I/O
- structure cannot process or return any data. This depends on the behaviour of
- the platforms I/O functions. This is often not desirable: one solution
- is to use non blocking I/O and use a timeout on the select() (or
- equivalent) call.
- =head1 BUGS
- The OpenSSL ASN1 functions cannot gracefully deal with non blocking I/O:
- that is they cannot retry after a partial read or write. This is usually
- worked around by only passing the relevant data to ASN1 functions when
- the entire structure can be read or written.
- =head1 RETURN VALUES
- BIO_should_read(), BIO_should_write(), BIO_should_io_special(), and
- BIO_should_retry() return either 1 or 0 based on the actual conditions
- of the B<BIO>.
- BIO_retry_type() returns a flag combination presenting the cause of a retry
- condition or false if there is no retry condition.
- BIO_get_retry_BIO() returns a valid B<BIO> structure.
- BIO_get_retry_reason() returns the reason for a special condition.
- =head1 SEE ALSO
- L<bio>
- =head1 HISTORY
- The BIO_get_retry_reason() and BIO_set_retry_reason() functions were added in
- OpenSSL 1.1.0.
- =head1 COPYRIGHT
- Copyright 2000-2018 The OpenSSL Project Authors. All Rights Reserved.
- Licensed under the OpenSSL license (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
- L<https://www.openssl.org/source/license.html>.
- =cut
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