NAME
BIO_find_type
,
BIO_next
, BIO_method_type
,
BIO_method_name
—
BIO chain traversal
SYNOPSIS
#include
<openssl/bio.h>
BIO *
BIO_find_type
(BIO *bio,
int type);
BIO *
BIO_next
(BIO *bio);
int
BIO_method_type
(const BIO
*bio);
const char *
BIO_method_name
(const BIO
*bio);
#define BIO_TYPE_NONE 0
#define BIO_TYPE_START 128
DESCRIPTION
BIO_find_type
()
searches for a BIO matching the given type in the
chain starting at bio. If the least significant byte
of the type argument is non-zero, only exact matches
of the type are accepted. Otherwise, a match only
requires that any of the bits set in the type argument
is also set in the candidate BIO.
Types with a least significant byte in the range from 0 to
BIO_TYPE_START
, inclusive, are reserved for BIO
types built into the library. Types with a least significant byte greater
than BIO_TYPE_START
are available for user-defined
BIO types; see
BIO_get_new_index(3) for details.
BIO_next
()
returns the next BIO in the chain after bio. This
function can be used to traverse all BIOs in a chain or in conjunction with
BIO_find_type
() to find all BIOs of a certain
type.
BIO_method_type
()
returns the type of the given bio.
BIO_method_name
()
returns an ASCII string representing the type of the
bio.
The following are the built-in source/sink BIO types that operate
on file descriptors. They all have both of the bits
BIO_TYPE_SOURCE_SINK
and
BIO_TYPE_DESCRIPTOR
but not the bit
BIO_TYPE_FILTER
set in their type constant.
type constant | name string | BIO_METHOD |
BIO_TYPE_ACCEPT |
socket accept | BIO_s_accept(3) |
BIO_TYPE_CONNECT |
socket connect | BIO_s_connect(3) |
BIO_TYPE_DGRAM |
datagram socket | BIO_s_datagram(3) |
BIO_TYPE_FD |
file descriptor | BIO_s_fd(3) |
BIO_TYPE_SOCKET |
socket | BIO_s_socket(3) |
The following are the built-in source/sink BIO types that do not
directly operate on file descriptors. They all have the bit
BIO_TYPE_SOURCE_SINK
but not the bits
BIO_TYPE_DESCRIPTOR
and
BIO_TYPE_FILTER
set in their type constant.
type constant | name string | BIO_METHOD |
BIO_TYPE_BIO |
BIO pair | BIO_s_bio(3) |
BIO_TYPE_FILE |
FILE pointer | BIO_s_file(3) |
BIO_TYPE_MEM |
memory buffer | BIO_s_mem(3) |
BIO_TYPE_NULL |
NULL | BIO_s_null(3) |
The following are the built-in filter BIO types. They all have the
bit BIO_TYPE_FILTER
but not the bits
BIO_TYPE_SOURCE_SINK
and
BIO_TYPE_DESCRIPTOR
set in their type constant.
type constant | name string | BIO_METHOD |
BIO_TYPE_BASE64 |
base64 encoding | BIO_f_base64(3) |
BIO_TYPE_BUFFER |
buffer | BIO_f_buffer(3) |
BIO_TYPE_CIPHER |
cipher | BIO_f_cipher(3) |
BIO_TYPE_MD |
message digest | BIO_f_md(3) |
BIO_TYPE_NULL_FILTER |
NULL filter | BIO_f_null(3) |
BIO_TYPE_SSL |
ssl | BIO_f_ssl(3) |
The constants BIO_TYPE_BER
,
BIO_TYPE_PROXY_CLIENT
, and
BIO_TYPE_PROXY_SERVER
do not correspond to any BIO
types implemented by the library and are not intended to be used for
application-defined types, either. The constants
BIO_TYPE_COMP
,
BIO_TYPE_LINEBUFFER
, and
BIO_TYPE_NBIO_TEST
corresponds to a deprecated BIO
types that are intentionally undocumented.
If a variable in an application program is intended to store a BIO
type but temporarily does not refer to any BIO or refers to a BIO of an
unknown type, setting the variable to BIO_TYPE_NONE
is recommended.
RETURN VALUES
BIO_find_type
() returns the next matching
BIO or NULL
if bio is a
NULL
pointer or if no matching BIO is found.
BIO_next
() returns the next BIO or
NULL
if bio is a
NULL
pointer or points to the last BIO in a
chain.
BIO_method_type
() returns one of the
BIO_TYPE_*
constants.
BIO_method_name
() returns an internal
pointer to a string.
EXAMPLES
Traverse a chain looking for digest BIOs:
BIO *btmp; btmp = in_bio; /* in_bio is the chain to search through */ while (btmp != NULL) { btmp = BIO_find_type(btmp, BIO_TYPE_MD); if (btmp == NULL) break; /* Not found */ /* btmp is a digest BIO, do something with it ... */ ... btmp = BIO_next(btmp); }
SEE ALSO
HISTORY
BIO_method_type
() and
BIO_method_name
() first appeared in SSLeay 0.6.0.
BIO_find_type
() first appeared in SSLeay 0.6.6.
These functions have been available since OpenBSD
2.4.
BIO_next
() first appeared in OpenSSL 0.9.6
and has been available since OpenBSD 2.9.