Class: Puma::MiniSSL::Socket
- Inherits:
-
Object
- Object
- Puma::MiniSSL::Socket
- Defined in:
- lib/puma/minissl.rb
Instance Attribute Summary collapse
- #peeraddr ⇒ Object readonly
- #peercert ⇒ Object readonly
-
#ssl_version_state ⇒ Object
readonly
Returns a two element array, first is protocol version (SSL_get_version), second is ‘handshake’ state (SSL_state_string).
- #to_io ⇒ Object readonly
Instance Method Summary collapse
- #close ⇒ Object
- #closed? ⇒ Boolean
- #engine_read_all ⇒ Object
- #flush ⇒ Object
-
#initialize(socket, engine) ⇒ Socket
constructor
A new instance of Socket.
- #read_nonblock(size, *_) ⇒ Object
- #readpartial(size) ⇒ Object
- #write(data) ⇒ Object (also: #syswrite, #<<)
-
#write_nonblock(data, *_) ⇒ Object
The problem with implementing it properly is that it means we’d have to have the ability to rewind an engine because after we write+extract, the socket write_nonblock call might raise an exception and later code would pass the same data in, but the engine would think it had already written the data in.
Constructor Details
#initialize(socket, engine) ⇒ Socket
Returns a new instance of Socket.
21 22 23 24 25 |
# File 'lib/puma/minissl.rb', line 21 def initialize(socket, engine) @socket = socket @engine = engine @peercert = nil end |
Instance Attribute Details
#peeraddr ⇒ Object (readonly)
180 181 182 |
# File 'lib/puma/minissl.rb', line 180 def peeraddr @socket.peeraddr end |
#peercert ⇒ Object (readonly)
185 186 187 188 189 190 191 192 |
# File 'lib/puma/minissl.rb', line 185 def peercert return @peercert if @peercert raw = @engine.peercert return nil unless raw @peercert = OpenSSL::X509::Certificate.new raw end |
#ssl_version_state ⇒ Object (readonly)
Returns a two element array, first is protocol version (SSL_get_version), second is ‘handshake’ state (SSL_state_string)
Used for dropping tcp connections to ssl. See OpenSSL ssl/ssl_stat.c SSL_state_string for info
45 46 47 |
# File 'lib/puma/minissl.rb', line 45 def ssl_version_state IS_JRUBY ? [nil, nil] : @engine.ssl_vers_st end |
#to_io ⇒ Object (readonly)
28 29 30 |
# File 'lib/puma/minissl.rb', line 28 def to_io @socket end |
Instance Method Details
#close ⇒ Object
164 165 166 167 168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 |
# File 'lib/puma/minissl.rb', line 164 def close begin unless @engine.shutdown while alert_data = @engine.extract @socket.write alert_data end end rescue IOError, SystemCallError Thread.current.purge_interrupt_queue if Thread.current.respond_to? :purge_interrupt_queue # nothing ensure @socket.close end end |
#closed? ⇒ Boolean
32 33 34 |
# File 'lib/puma/minissl.rb', line 32 def closed? @socket.closed? end |
#engine_read_all ⇒ Object
74 75 76 77 78 79 80 |
# File 'lib/puma/minissl.rb', line 74 def engine_read_all output = @engine.read while output and additional_output = @engine.read output << additional_output end output end |
#flush ⇒ Object
160 161 162 |
# File 'lib/puma/minissl.rb', line 160 def flush @socket.flush end |
#read_nonblock(size, *_) ⇒ Object
82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 |
# File 'lib/puma/minissl.rb', line 82 def read_nonblock(size, *_) # *_ is to deal with keyword args that were added # at some point (and being used in the wild) while true output = engine_read_all return output if output data = @socket.read_nonblock(size, exception: false) if data == :wait_readable || data == :wait_writable # It would make more sense to let @socket.read_nonblock raise # EAGAIN if necessary but it seems like it'll misbehave on Windows. # I don't have a Windows machine to debug this so I can't explain # exactly whats happening in that OS. Please let me know if you # find out! # # In the meantime, we can emulate the correct behavior by # capturing :wait_readable & :wait_writable and raising EAGAIN # ourselves. raise IO::EAGAINWaitReadable elsif data.nil? raise SSLError.exception "HTTP connection?" if bad_tlsv1_3? return nil end @engine.inject(data) output = engine_read_all return output if output while neg_data = @engine.extract @socket.write neg_data end end end |
#readpartial(size) ⇒ Object
57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 |
# File 'lib/puma/minissl.rb', line 57 def readpartial(size) while true output = @engine.read return output if output data = @socket.readpartial(size) @engine.inject(data) output = @engine.read return output if output while neg_data = @engine.extract @socket.write neg_data end end end |
#write(data) ⇒ Object Also known as: syswrite, <<
117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 |
# File 'lib/puma/minissl.rb', line 117 def write(data) return 0 if data.empty? data_size = data.bytesize need = data_size while true wrote = @engine.write data enc_wr = ''.dup while (enc = @engine.extract) enc_wr << enc end @socket.write enc_wr unless enc_wr.empty? need -= wrote return data_size if need == 0 data = data.byteslice(wrote..-1) end end |
#write_nonblock(data, *_) ⇒ Object
The problem with implementing it properly is that it means we’d have to have the ability to rewind an engine because after we write+extract, the socket write_nonblock call might raise an exception and later code would pass the same data in, but the engine would think it had already written the data in.
So for the time being (and since write blocking is quite rare), go ahead and actually block in write_nonblock.
156 157 158 |
# File 'lib/puma/minissl.rb', line 156 def write_nonblock(data, *_) write data end |