1 | =pod
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2 |
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3 | =head1 NAME
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4 |
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5 | BIO_sendmmsg, BIO_recvmmsg, BIO_dgram_set_local_addr_enable,
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6 | BIO_dgram_get_local_addr_enable, BIO_dgram_get_local_addr_cap,
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7 | BIO_err_is_non_fatal - send and receive multiple datagrams in a single call
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8 |
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9 | =head1 SYNOPSIS
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10 |
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11 | #include <openssl/bio.h>
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12 |
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13 | typedef struct bio_msg_st {
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14 | void *data;
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15 | size_t data_len;
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16 | BIO_ADDR *peer, *local;
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17 | uint64_t flags;
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18 | } BIO_MSG;
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19 |
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20 | int BIO_sendmmsg(BIO *b, BIO_MSG *msg,
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21 | size_t stride, size_t num_msg, uint64_t flags,
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22 | size_t *msgs_processed);
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23 | int BIO_recvmmsg(BIO *b, BIO_MSG *msg,
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24 | size_t stride, size_t num_msg, uint64_t flags,
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25 | size_t *msgs_processed);
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26 |
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27 | int BIO_dgram_set_local_addr_enable(BIO *b, int enable);
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28 | int BIO_dgram_get_local_addr_enable(BIO *b, int *enable);
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29 | int BIO_dgram_get_local_addr_cap(BIO *b);
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30 | int BIO_err_is_non_fatal(unsigned int errcode);
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31 |
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32 | =head1 DESCRIPTION
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33 |
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34 | BIO_sendmmsg() and BIO_recvmmsg() functions can be used to send and receive
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35 | multiple messages in a single call to a BIO. They are analogous to sendmmsg(2)
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36 | and recvmmsg(2) on operating systems which provide those functions.
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37 |
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38 | The B<BIO_MSG> structure provides a subset of the functionality of the B<struct
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39 | msghdr> structure defined by POSIX. These functions accept an array of
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40 | B<BIO_MSG> structures. On any particular invocation, these functions may process
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41 | all of the passed structures, some of them, or none of them. This is indicated
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42 | by the value stored in I<*msgs_processed>, which expresses the number of
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43 | messages processed.
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44 |
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45 | The caller should set the I<data> member of a B<BIO_MSG> to a buffer containing
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46 | the data to send, or to be filled with a received message. I<data_len> should be
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47 | set to the size of the buffer in bytes. If the given B<BIO_MSG> is processed (in
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48 | other words, if the integer returned by the function is greater than or equal to
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49 | that B<BIO_MSG>'s array index), I<data_len> will be modified to specify the
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50 | actual amount of data sent or received.
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51 |
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52 | The I<flags> field of a B<BIO_MSG> provides input per-message flags to the
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53 | invocation. If the invocation processes that B<BIO_MSG>, the I<flags> field is
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54 | written with output per-message flags, or zero if no such flags are applicable.
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55 |
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56 | Currently, no input or output per-message flags are defined and this field
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57 | should be set to zero before calling BIO_sendmmsg() or BIO_recvmmsg().
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58 |
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59 | The I<flags> argument to BIO_sendmmsg() and BIO_recvmmsg() provides global
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60 | flags which affect the entire invocation. No global flags are currently
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61 | defined and this argument should be set to zero.
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62 |
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63 | When these functions are used to send and receive datagrams, the I<peer> field
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64 | of a B<BIO_MSG> allows the destination address of sent datagrams to be specified
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65 | on a per-datagram basis, and the source address of received datagrams to be
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66 | determined. The I<peer> field should be set to point to a B<BIO_ADDR>, which
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67 | will be read by BIO_sendmmsg() and used as the destination address for sent
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68 | datagrams, and written by BIO_recvmmsg() with the source address of received
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69 | datagrams.
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70 |
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71 | Similarly, the I<local> field of a B<BIO_MSG> allows the source address of sent
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72 | datagrams to be specified on a per-datagram basis, and the destination address
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73 | of received datagrams to be determined. Unlike I<peer>, support for I<local>
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74 | must be explicitly enabled on a B<BIO> before it can be used; see
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75 | BIO_dgram_set_local_addr_enable(). If I<local> is non-NULL in a B<BIO_MSG> and
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76 | support for I<local> has not been enabled, processing of that B<BIO_MSG> fails.
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77 |
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78 | I<peer> and I<local> should be set to NULL if they are not required. Support for
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79 | I<local> may not be available on all platforms; on these platforms, these
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80 | functions always fail if I<local> is non-NULL.
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81 |
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82 | If I<local> is specified and local address support is enabled, but the operating
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83 | system does not report a local address for a specific received message, the
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84 | B<BIO_ADDR> it points to will be cleared (address family set to C<AF_UNSPEC>).
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85 | This is known to happen on Windows when a packet is received which was sent by
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86 | the local system, regardless of whether the packet's destination address was the
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87 | loopback address or the IP address of a local non-loopback interface. This is
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88 | also known to happen on macOS in some circumstances, such as for packets sent
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89 | before local address support was enabled for a receiving socket. These are
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90 | OS-specific limitations. As such, users of this API using local address support
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91 | should expect to sometimes receive a cleared local B<BIO_ADDR> instead of the
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92 | correct value.
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93 |
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94 | The I<stride> argument must be set to C<sizeof(BIO_MSG)>. This argument
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95 | facilitates backwards compatibility if fields are added to B<BIO_MSG>. Callers
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96 | must zero-initialize B<BIO_MSG>.
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97 |
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98 | I<num_msg> should be sent to the maximum number of messages to send or receive,
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99 | which is also the length of the array pointed to by I<msg>.
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100 |
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101 | I<msgs_processed> must be non-NULL and points to an integer written with the
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102 | number of messages successfully processed; see the RETURN VALUES section for
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103 | further discussion.
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104 |
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105 | Unlike most BIO functions, these functions explicitly support multi-threaded
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106 | use. Multiple concurrent writers and multiple concurrent readers of the same BIO
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107 | are permitted in any combination. As such, these functions do not clear, set, or
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108 | otherwise modify BIO retry flags. The return value must be used to determine
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109 | whether an operation should be retried; see below.
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110 |
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111 | The support for concurrent use extends to BIO_sendmmsg() and BIO_recvmmsg()
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112 | only, and no other function may be called on a given BIO while any call to
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113 | BIO_sendmmsg() or BIO_recvmmsg() is in progress, or vice versa.
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114 |
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115 | BIO_dgram_set_local_addr_enable() and BIO_dgram_get_local_addr_enable() control
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116 | whether local address support is enabled. To enable local address support, call
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117 | BIO_dgram_set_local_addr_enable() with an argument of 1. The call will fail if
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118 | local address support is not available for the platform.
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119 | BIO_dgram_get_local_addr_enable() retrieves the value set by
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120 | BIO_dgram_set_local_addr_enable().
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121 |
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122 | BIO_dgram_get_local_addr_cap() determines if the B<BIO> is capable of supporting
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123 | local addresses.
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124 |
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125 | BIO_err_is_non_fatal() determines if a packed error code represents an error
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126 | which is transient in nature.
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127 |
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128 | =head1 NOTES
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129 |
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130 | Some implementations of the BIO_sendmmsg() and BIO_recvmmsg() BIO methods might
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131 | always process at most one message at a time, for example when OS-level
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132 | functionality to transmit or receive multiple messages at a time is not
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133 | available.
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134 |
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135 | =head1 RETURN VALUES
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136 |
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137 | On success, the functions BIO_sendmmsg() and BIO_recvmmsg() return 1 and write
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138 | the number of messages successfully processed (which need not be nonzero) to
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139 | I<msgs_processed>. Where a positive value n is written to I<msgs_processed>, all
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140 | entries in the B<BIO_MSG> array from 0 through n-1 inclusive have their
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141 | I<data_len> and I<flags> fields updated with the results of the operation on
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142 | that message. If the call was to BIO_recvmmsg() and the I<peer> or I<local>
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143 | fields of that message are non-NULL, the B<BIO_ADDR> structures they point to
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144 | are written with the relevant address.
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145 |
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146 | On failure, the functions BIO_sendmmsg() and BIO_recvmmsg() return 0 and write
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147 | zero to I<msgs_processed>. Thus I<msgs_processed> is always written regardless
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148 | of the outcome of the function call.
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149 |
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150 | If BIO_sendmmsg() and BIO_recvmmsg() fail, they always raise an B<ERR_LIB_BIO>
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151 | error using L<ERR_raise(3)>. Any error may be raised, but the following in
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152 | particular may be noted:
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153 |
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154 | =over 2
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155 |
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156 | =item B<BIO_R_LOCAL_ADDR_NOT_AVAILABLE>
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157 |
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158 | The I<local> field was set to a non-NULL value, but local address support is not
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159 | available or not enabled on the BIO.
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160 |
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161 | =item B<BIO_R_PEER_ADDR_NOT_AVAILABLE>
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162 |
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163 | The I<peer> field was set to a non-NULL value, but peer address support is not
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164 | available on the BIO.
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165 |
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166 | =item B<BIO_R_UNSUPPORTED_METHOD>
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167 |
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168 | The BIO_sendmmsg() or BIO_recvmmsg() method is not supported on the BIO.
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169 |
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170 | =item B<BIO_R_NON_FATAL>
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171 |
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172 | The call failed due to a transient, non-fatal error (for example, because the
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173 | BIO is in nonblocking mode and the call would otherwise have blocked).
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174 |
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175 | Implementations of this interface which do not make system calls and thereby
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176 | pass through system error codes using B<ERR_LIB_SYS> (for example, memory-based
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177 | implementations) should issue this reason code to indicate a transient failure.
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178 | However, users of this interface should not test for this reason code directly,
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179 | as there are multiple possible packed error codes representing a transient
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180 | failure; use BIO_err_is_non_fatal() instead (discussed below).
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181 |
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182 | =item Socket errors
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183 |
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184 | OS-level socket errors are reported using an error with library code
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185 | B<ERR_LIB_SYS>; for a packed error code B<errcode> where
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186 | C<ERR_SYSTEM_ERROR(errcode) == 1>, the OS-level socket error code can be
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187 | retrieved using C<ERR_GET_REASON(errcode)>. The packed error code can be
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188 | retrieved by calling L<ERR_peek_last_error(3)> after the call to BIO_sendmmsg()
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189 | or BIO_recvmmsg() returns 0.
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190 |
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191 | =item Non-fatal errors
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192 |
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193 | Whether an error is transient can be determined by passing the packed error code
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194 | to BIO_err_is_non_fatal(). Callers should do this instead of testing the reason
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195 | code directly, as there are many possible error codes which can indicate a
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196 | transient error, many of which are system specific.
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197 |
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198 | =back
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199 |
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200 | Third parties implementing custom BIOs supporting the BIO_sendmmsg() or
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201 | BIO_recvmmsg() methods should note that it is a required part of the API
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202 | contract that an error is always raised when either of these functions return 0.
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203 |
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204 | BIO_dgram_set_local_addr_enable() returns 1 if local address support was
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205 | successfully enabled or disabled and 0 otherwise.
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206 |
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207 | BIO_dgram_get_local_addr_enable() returns 1 if the local address support enable
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208 | flag was successfully retrieved.
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209 |
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210 | BIO_dgram_get_local_addr_cap() returns 1 if the B<BIO> can support local
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211 | addresses.
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212 |
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213 | BIO_err_is_non_fatal() returns 1 if the passed packed error code represents an
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214 | error which is transient in nature.
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215 |
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216 | =head1 HISTORY
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217 |
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218 | These functions were added in OpenSSL 3.2.
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219 |
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220 | =head1 COPYRIGHT
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221 |
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222 | Copyright 2000-2023 The OpenSSL Project Authors. All Rights Reserved.
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223 |
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224 | Licensed under the Apache License 2.0 (the "License"). You may not use
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225 | this file except in compliance with the License. You can obtain a copy
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226 | in the file LICENSE in the source distribution or at
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227 | L<https://www.openssl.org/source/license.html>.
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228 |
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229 | =cut
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