Difference between revisions of "BIO"
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In standard usage end of a chain is a source sink, and all other elements are filters. | In standard usage end of a chain is a source sink, and all other elements are filters. | ||
+ | |||
+ | * [[Manual:BIO_s_bio(3)]] | ||
+ | |||
+ | Provide a way to combine half of one source sink with half of another to make sink communicate with source of the other. | ||
+ | |||
+ | two separated BIOs can then be connected with BIO_make_bio_pair() into a connected pair. |
Revision as of 22:02, 31 October 2014
A BIO is an I/O stream abstraction; essentially OpenSSL's answer to the C library's FILE *
. OpenSSL comes with a number of useful BIO types predefined, or you can create your own.
BIOs come in two flavors: source/sink, or filter. BIOs can be chained together. Each chain always has exactly one source/sink, but can have any number (zero or more) of filters.
Reading from a BIO can be done with Manual:BIO_read(3) and BIO_gets
.
Writing to a BIO can be done with BIO_write
, BIO_puts
, BIO_printf
, and BIO_vprintf
.
Filter BIOs
- Manual:BIO_f_base64(3)
- Manual:BIO_f_buffer(3)
- Manual:BIO_f_cipher(3)
- Manual:BIO_f_md(3)
- Manual:BIO_f_ssl(3)
Source/sink BIOs
- Manual:BIO_s_accept(3)
- Manual:BIO_s_bio(3)
- Manual:BIO_s_connect(3)
- Manual:BIO_s_fd(3)
- Manual:BIO_s_file(3)
- Manual:BIO_s_mem(3)
- Manual:BIO_s_null(3)
- Manual:BIO_s_socket(3)
implementation of those bio are within bio/bss_xxx.c bss stading for Bio Source Sink
Combining Filters and Source Sink BIOs
new_head = BIO_push(BIO * local_head, BIO * tail)
will connect tail at end of local_head chain.
WARNING BIO_push will never fail, but can create invalid chains.
In standard usage end of a chain is a source sink, and all other elements are filters.
Provide a way to combine half of one source sink with half of another to make sink communicate with source of the other.
two separated BIOs can then be connected with BIO_make_bio_pair() into a connected pair.