Module: OpenSSL::Buffering

Includes:
Enumerable
Included in:
SSL::SSLSocket
Defined in:
lib/jopenssl19/openssl/buffering.rb,
lib/jopenssl22/openssl/buffering.rb,
lib/jopenssl23/openssl/buffering.rb

Overview

OpenSSL IO buffering mix-in module.

This module allows an OpenSSL::SSL::SSLSocket to behave like an IO.

You typically won’t use this module directly, you can see it implemented in OpenSSL::SSL::SSLSocket.

Constant Summary collapse

BLOCK_SIZE =

Default size to read from or write to the SSLSocket for buffer operations.

1024*16

Instance Attribute Summary collapse

Instance Method Summary collapse

Instance Attribute Details

#syncObject

The “sync mode” of the SSLSocket.

See IO#sync for full details.



30
31
32
# File 'lib/jopenssl19/openssl/buffering.rb', line 30

def sync
  @sync
end

Instance Method Details

#<<(s) ⇒ Object

Writes s to the stream. s will be converted to a String using .to_s method.



382
383
384
385
# File 'lib/jopenssl19/openssl/buffering.rb', line 382

def << (s)
  do_write(s)
  self
end

#closeObject

Closes the SSLSocket and flushes any unwritten data.



445
446
447
448
# File 'lib/jopenssl19/openssl/buffering.rb', line 445

def close
  flush rescue nil
  sysclose
end

#each(eol = $/) ⇒ Object Also known as: each_line

Executes the block for every line in the stream where lines are separated by eol.

See also #gets



220
221
222
223
224
# File 'lib/jopenssl19/openssl/buffering.rb', line 220

def each(eol=$/)
  while line = self.gets(eol)
    yield line
  end
end

#each_byteObject

Calls the given block once for each byte in the stream.



261
262
263
264
265
# File 'lib/jopenssl19/openssl/buffering.rb', line 261

def each_byte # :yields: byte
  while c = getc
    yield(c.ord)
  end
end

#eof?Boolean Also known as: eof

Returns true if the stream is at file which means there is no more data to be read.

Returns:

  • (Boolean)


292
293
294
295
# File 'lib/jopenssl19/openssl/buffering.rb', line 292

def eof?
  fill_rbuff if !@eof && @rbuffer.empty?
  @eof && @rbuffer.empty?
end

#flushObject

Flushes buffered data to the SSLSocket.



433
434
435
436
437
438
439
440
# File 'lib/jopenssl19/openssl/buffering.rb', line 433

def flush
  osync = @sync
  @sync = true
  do_write ""
  return self
ensure
  @sync = osync
end

#getcObject

Reads one character from the stream. Returns nil if called at end of file.



254
255
256
# File 'lib/jopenssl19/openssl/buffering.rb', line 254

def getc
  read(1)
end

#gets(eol = $/, limit = nil) ⇒ Object

Reads the next “line” from the stream. Lines are separated by eol. If limit is provided the result will not be longer than the given number of bytes.

eol may be a String or Regexp.

Unlike IO#gets the line read will not be assigned to $_.

Unlike IO#gets the separator must be provided if a limit is provided.



196
197
198
199
200
201
202
203
204
205
206
207
208
209
210
211
212
# File 'lib/jopenssl19/openssl/buffering.rb', line 196

def gets(eol=$/, limit=nil)
  idx = @rbuffer.index(eol)
  until @eof
    break if idx
    fill_rbuff
    idx = @rbuffer.index(eol)
  end
  if eol.is_a?(Regexp)
    size = idx ? idx+$&.size : nil
  else
    size = idx ? idx+eol.size : nil
  end
  if limit and limit >= 0
    size = [size, limit].min
  end
  consume_rbuff(size)
end

#initializeObject

Creates an instance of OpenSSL’s buffering IO module.



44
45
46
47
48
# File 'lib/jopenssl22/openssl/buffering.rb', line 44

def initialize(*args)
  @eof = false
  @rbuffer = ""
  @sync = @io.sync
end

Writes args to the stream.

See IO#print for full details.



412
413
414
415
416
417
# File 'lib/jopenssl19/openssl/buffering.rb', line 412

def print(*args)
  s = ""
  args.each{ |arg| s << arg.to_s }
  do_write(s)
  nil
end

#printf(s, *args) ⇒ Object

Formats and writes to the stream converting parameters under control of the format string.

See Kernel#sprintf for format string details.



425
426
427
428
# File 'lib/jopenssl19/openssl/buffering.rb', line 425

def printf(s, *args)
  do_write(s % args)
  nil
end

#puts(*args) ⇒ Object

Writes args to the stream along with a record separator.

See IO#puts for full details.



392
393
394
395
396
397
398
399
400
401
402
403
404
405
# File 'lib/jopenssl19/openssl/buffering.rb', line 392

def puts(*args)
  s = ""
  if args.empty?
    s << "\n"
  end
  args.each{|arg|
    s << arg.to_s
    if $/ && /\n\z/ !~ s
      s << "\n"
    end
  }
  do_write(s)
  nil
end

#read(size = nil, buf = nil) ⇒ Object

Reads size bytes from the stream. If buf is provided it must reference a string which will receive the data.

See IO#read for full details.



83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
# File 'lib/jopenssl19/openssl/buffering.rb', line 83

def read(size=nil, buf=nil)
  if size == 0
    if buf
      buf.clear
      return buf
    else
      return ""
    end
  end
  until @eof
    break if size && size <= @rbuffer.size
    fill_rbuff
  end
  ret = consume_rbuff(size) || ""
  if buf
    buf.replace(ret)
    ret = buf
  end
  (size && ret.empty?) ? nil : ret
end

#read_nonblock(maxlen, buf = nil, exception: true) ⇒ Object

Reads at most maxlen bytes in the non-blocking manner.

When no data can be read without blocking it raises OpenSSL::SSL::SSLError extended by IO::WaitReadable or IO::WaitWritable.

IO::WaitReadable means SSL needs to read internally so read_nonblock should be called again when the underlying IO is readable.

IO::WaitWritable means SSL needs to write internally so read_nonblock should be called again after the underlying IO is writable.

OpenSSL::Buffering#read_nonblock needs two rescue clause as follows:

# emulates blocking read (readpartial).
begin
  result = ssl.read_nonblock(maxlen)
rescue IO::WaitReadable
  IO.select([io])
  retry
rescue IO::WaitWritable
  IO.select(nil, [io])
  retry
end

Note that one reason that read_nonblock writes to the underlying IO is when the peer requests a new TLS/SSL handshake. See openssl the FAQ for more details. www.openssl.org/support/faq.html

By specifying a keyword argument exception to false, you can indicate that read_nonblock should not raise an IO::Wait*able exception, but return the symbol :wait_writable or :wait_readable instead. At EOF, it will return nil instead of raising EOFError.



164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
# File 'lib/jopenssl19/openssl/buffering.rb', line 164

def read_nonblock(maxlen, buf=nil)
  if maxlen == 0
    if buf
      buf.clear
      return buf
    else
      return ""
    end
  end
  if @rbuffer.empty?
    return sysread_nonblock(maxlen, buf)
  end
  ret = consume_rbuff(maxlen)
  if buf
    buf.replace(ret)
    ret = buf
  end
  raise EOFError if ret.empty?
  ret
end

#readcharObject

Reads a one-character string from the stream. Raises an EOFError at end of file.

Raises:

  • (EOFError)


271
272
273
274
# File 'lib/jopenssl19/openssl/buffering.rb', line 271

def readchar
  raise EOFError if eof?
  getc
end

#readline(eol = $/) ⇒ Object

Reads a line from the stream which is separated by eol.

Raises EOFError if at end of file.

Raises:

  • (EOFError)


245
246
247
248
# File 'lib/jopenssl19/openssl/buffering.rb', line 245

def readline(eol=$/)
  raise EOFError if eof?
  gets(eol)
end

#readlines(eol = $/) ⇒ Object

Reads lines from the stream which are separated by eol.

See also #gets



232
233
234
235
236
237
238
# File 'lib/jopenssl19/openssl/buffering.rb', line 232

def readlines(eol=$/)
  ary = []
  while line = self.gets(eol)
    ary << line
  end
  ary
end

#readpartial(maxlen, buf = nil) ⇒ Object

Reads at most maxlen bytes from the stream. If buf is provided it must reference a string which will receive the data.

See IO#readpartial for full details.



110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
# File 'lib/jopenssl19/openssl/buffering.rb', line 110

def readpartial(maxlen, buf=nil)
  if maxlen == 0
    if buf
      buf.clear
      return buf
    else
      return ""
    end
  end
  if @rbuffer.empty?
    begin
      return sysread(maxlen, buf)
    rescue Errno::EAGAIN
      retry
    end
  end
  ret = consume_rbuff(maxlen)
  if buf
    buf.replace(ret)
    ret = buf
  end
  raise EOFError if ret.empty?
  ret
end

#ungetc(c) ⇒ Object

Pushes character c back onto the stream such that a subsequent buffered character read will return it.

Unlike IO#getc multiple bytes may be pushed back onto the stream.

Has no effect on unbuffered reads (such as #sysread).



284
285
286
# File 'lib/jopenssl19/openssl/buffering.rb', line 284

def ungetc(c)
  @rbuffer[0,0] = c.chr
end

#write(*s) ⇒ Object

Writes s to the stream. If the argument is not a String it will be converted using .to_s method. Returns the number of bytes written.



335
336
337
338
# File 'lib/jopenssl19/openssl/buffering.rb', line 335

def write(s)
  do_write(s)
  s.bytesize
end

#write_nonblock(s, exception: true) ⇒ Object

Writes s in the non-blocking manner.

If there is buffered data, it is flushed first. This may block.

write_nonblock returns number of bytes written to the SSL connection.

When no data can be written without blocking it raises OpenSSL::SSL::SSLError extended by IO::WaitReadable or IO::WaitWritable.

IO::WaitReadable means SSL needs to read internally so write_nonblock should be called again after the underlying IO is readable.

IO::WaitWritable means SSL needs to write internally so write_nonblock should be called again after underlying IO is writable.

So OpenSSL::Buffering#write_nonblock needs two rescue clause as follows.

# emulates blocking write.
begin
  result = ssl.write_nonblock(str)
rescue IO::WaitReadable
  IO.select([io])
  retry
rescue IO::WaitWritable
  IO.select(nil, [io])
  retry
end

Note that one reason that write_nonblock reads from the underlying IO is when the peer requests a new TLS/SSL handshake. See the openssl FAQ for more details. www.openssl.org/support/faq.html

By specifying a keyword argument exception to false, you can indicate that write_nonblock should not raise an IO::Wait*able exception, but return the symbol :wait_writable or :wait_readable instead.



373
374
375
376
# File 'lib/jopenssl19/openssl/buffering.rb', line 373

def write_nonblock(s)
  flush
  syswrite_nonblock(s)
end