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| BIO_s_accept(3)
NAMEBIO_s_accept, BIO_set_accept_port, BIO_get_accept_port, BIO_new_accept, BIO_set_nbio_accept, BIO_set_accept_bios, BIO_set_bind_mode, BIO_get_bind_mode, BIO_do_accept - accept BIO
SYNOPSIS#include <openssl/bio.h> BIO_METHOD *BIO_s_accept(void); long BIO_set_accept_port(BIO *b, char *name); char *BIO_get_accept_port(BIO *b); BIO *BIO_new_accept(char *host_port); long BIO_set_nbio_accept(BIO *b, int n); long BIO_set_accept_bios(BIO *b, char *bio); long BIO_set_bind_mode(BIO *b, long mode); long BIO_get_bind_mode(BIO *b, long dummy); #define BIO_BIND_NORMAL 0 #define BIO_BIND_REUSEADDR_IF_UNUSED 1 #define BIO_BIND_REUSEADDR 2 int BIO_do_accept(BIO *b);
DESCRIPTION
Using accept BIOs, TCP/IP connections can be accepted and data transferred using only BIO routines. In this way any platform specific operations are hidden by the BIO abstraction. Read and write operations on an accept BIO will perform I/O on the underlying connection. If no connection is established and the port (see below) is set up properly then the BIO waits for an incoming connection.
Accept BIOs support If the close flag is set on an accept BIO then any active connection on that chain is shutdown and the socket closed when the BIO is freed.
Calling
NOTESWhen an accept BIO is at the end of a chain it will await an incoming connection before processing I/O calls. When an accept BIO is not at then end of a chain it passes I/O calls to the next BIO in the chain. When a connection is established a new socket BIO is created for the connection and appended to the chain. That is the chain is now accept->socket. This effectively means that attempting I/O on an initial accept socket will await an incoming connection then perform I/O on it.
If any additional BIOs have been set using
If a server wishes to process multiple connections (as is normally the case) then the accept BIO must be made available for further incoming connections. This can be done by waiting for a connection and then calling: connection = BIO_pop(accept);
After this call connection will contain a BIO for the recently established connection and accept will now be a single BIO again which can be used to await further incoming
connections. If no further connections will be accepted the accept can be freed using
If only a single connection will be processed it is possible to perform I/O
using the accept BIO itself. This is often undesirable however because the
accept BIO will still accept additional incoming connections. This can be
resolved by using
If the underlying accept socket is non-blocking and
RETURN VALUESTBA
EXAMPLEThis example accepts two connections on port 4444, sends messages down each and finally closes both down. BIO *abio, *cbio, *cbio2;
ERR_load_crypto_strings();
abio = BIO_new_accept("4444");
/* First call to BIO_accept() sets up accept BIO */
if(BIO_do_accept(abio) <= 0) {
fprintf(stderr, "Error setting up accept\n");
ERR_print_errors_fp(stderr);
exit(0);
}
/* Wait for incoming connection */
if(BIO_do_accept(abio) <= 0) {
fprintf(stderr, "Error accepting connection\n");
ERR_print_errors_fp(stderr);
exit(0);
}
fprintf(stderr, "Connection 1 established\n");
/* Retrieve BIO for connection */
cbio = BIO_pop(abio);
BIO_puts(cbio, "Connection 1: Sending out Data on initial connection\n");
fprintf(stderr, "Sent out data on connection 1\n");
/* Wait for another connection */
if(BIO_do_accept(abio) <= 0) {
fprintf(stderr, "Error accepting connection\n");
ERR_print_errors_fp(stderr);
exit(0);
}
fprintf(stderr, "Connection 2 established\n");
/* Close accept BIO to refuse further connections */
cbio2 = BIO_pop(abio);
BIO_free(abio);
BIO_puts(cbio2, "Connection 2: Sending out Data on second\n");
fprintf(stderr, "Sent out data on connection 2\n");
BIO_puts(cbio, "Connection 1: Second connection established\n"); /* Close the two established connections */ BIO_free(cbio); BIO_free(cbio2);
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