NAME
SSL_read
—
read bytes from a TLS/SSL
connection
SYNOPSIS
#include
<openssl/ssl.h>
int
SSL_read
(SSL
*ssl, void *buf,
int num);
DESCRIPTION
SSL_read
()
tries to read num bytes from the specified
ssl into the buffer buf.
NOTES
If necessary, SSL_read
() will negotiate a
TLS/SSL session, if not already explicitly performed by
SSL_connect(3) or
SSL_accept(3). If the peer requests a re-negotiation, it will
be performed transparently during the SSL_read
()
operation. The behaviour of SSL_read
() depends on
the underlying BIO.
For the transparent negotiation to succeed, the
ssl must have been initialized to client or server
mode. This is being done by calling
SSL_set_connect_state(3) or
SSL_set_accept_state(3) before the first call to
SSL_read
()
or SSL_write(3).
SSL_read
()
works based on the SSL/TLS records. The data are received in records (with a
maximum record size of 16kB for SSLv3/TLSv1). Only after a record has been
completely received can it be processed (decrypted and checked for
integrity). Therefore data not retrieved at the last call of
SSL_read
() can still be buffered inside the SSL
layer and will be retrieved on the next call to
SSL_read
(). If num is higher
than the number of bytes buffered, SSL_read
() will
return with the bytes buffered. If no more bytes are in the buffer,
SSL_read
() will trigger the processing of the next
record. Only when the record has been received and processed completely will
SSL_read
() return reporting success. At most the
contents of the record will be returned. As the size of an SSL/TLS record
may exceed the maximum packet size of the underlying transport (e.g., TCP),
it may be necessary to read several packets from the transport layer before
the record is complete and SSL_read
() can
succeed.
If the underlying BIO is
blocking,
SSL_read
()
will only return once the read operation has been finished or an error has
occurred, except when a renegotiation take place, in which case a
SSL_ERROR_WANT_READ
may occur. This behavior can be
controlled with the SSL_MODE_AUTO_RETRY
flag of the
SSL_CTX_set_mode(3) call.
If the underlying BIO is
non-blocking,
SSL_read
()
will also return when the underlying BIO could not
satisfy the needs of SSL_read
() to continue the
operation. In this case a call to
SSL_get_error(3) with the return value of
SSL_read
() will yield
SSL_ERROR_WANT_READ
or
SSL_ERROR_WANT_WRITE
. As at any time a
re-negotiation is possible, a call to SSL_read
() can
also cause write operations! The calling process then must repeat the call
after taking appropriate action to satisfy the needs of
SSL_read
(). The action depends on the underlying
BIO. When using a non-blocking socket, nothing is to
be done, but select(2) can be used to check for the required condition.
When using a buffering BIO, like a
BIO pair, data must be written into or retrieved out
of the BIO before being able to continue.
SSL_pending(3) can be used to find out whether there are
buffered bytes available for immediate retrieval. In this case
SSL_read
()
can be called without blocking or actually receiving new data from the
underlying socket.
WARNING
When an SSL_read
() operation has to be
repeated because of SSL_ERROR_WANT_READ
or
SSL_ERROR_WANT_WRITE
, it must be repeated with the
same arguments.
RETURN VALUES
The following return values can occur:
- >0
- The read operation was successful; the return value is the number of bytes actually read from the TLS/SSL connection.
- 0
- The read operation was not successful. The reason may either be a clean
shutdown due to a “close notify” alert sent by the peer (in
which case the
SSL_RECEIVED_SHUTDOWN
flag in the ssl shutdown state is set (see SSL_shutdown(3) and SSL_set_shutdown(3)). It is also possible that the peer simply shut down the underlying transport and the shutdown is incomplete. CallSSL_get_error
() with the return value to find out whether an error occurred or the connection was shut down cleanly (SSL_ERROR_ZERO_RETURN
).SSLv2 (deprecated) does not support a shutdown alert protocol, so it can only be detected whether the underlying connection was closed. It cannot be checked whether the closure was initiated by the peer or by something else.
- <0
- The read operation was not successful, because either an error occurred or
action must be taken by the calling process. Call
SSL_get_error
() with the return value to find out the reason.
SEE ALSO
bio(3), ssl(3), SSL_accept(3), SSL_connect(3), SSL_CTX_new(3), SSL_CTX_set_mode(3), SSL_get_error(3), SSL_pending(3), SSL_set_connect_state(3), SSL_set_shutdown(3), SSL_shutdown(3), SSL_write(3)