Module: OpenSSL::Buffering
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
-
#sync ⇒ Object
The “sync mode” of the SSLSocket.
Instance Method Summary collapse
-
#<<(s) ⇒ Object
Writes
s
to the stream. -
#close ⇒ Object
Closes the SSLSocket and flushes any unwritten data.
-
#each(eol = $/) ⇒ Object
(also: #each_line)
Executes the block for every line in the stream where lines are separated by
eol
. -
#each_byte ⇒ Object
Calls the given block once for each byte in the stream.
-
#eof? ⇒ Boolean
(also: #eof)
Returns true if the stream is at file which means there is no more data to be read.
-
#flush ⇒ Object
Flushes buffered data to the SSLSocket.
-
#getc ⇒ Object
Reads one character from the stream.
-
#gets(eol = $/, limit = nil) ⇒ Object
Reads the next “line” from the stream.
-
#initialize ⇒ Object
Creates an instance of OpenSSL’s buffering IO module.
-
#print(*args) ⇒ Object
Writes
args
to the stream. -
#printf(s, *args) ⇒ Object
Formats and writes to the stream converting parameters under control of the format string.
-
#puts(*args) ⇒ Object
Writes
args
to the stream along with a record separator. -
#read(size = nil, buf = nil) ⇒ Object
Reads
size
bytes from the stream. -
#read_nonblock(maxlen, buf = nil, exception: true) ⇒ Object
Reads at most
maxlen
bytes in the non-blocking manner. -
#readchar ⇒ Object
Reads a one-character string from the stream.
-
#readline(eol = $/) ⇒ Object
Reads a line from the stream which is separated by
eol
. -
#readlines(eol = $/) ⇒ Object
Reads lines from the stream which are separated by
eol
. -
#readpartial(maxlen, buf = nil) ⇒ Object
Reads at most
maxlen
bytes from the stream. -
#ungetc(c) ⇒ Object
Pushes character
c
back onto the stream such that a subsequent buffered character read will return it. -
#write(s) ⇒ Object
Writes
s
to the stream. -
#write_nonblock(s, exception: true) ⇒ Object
Writes
s
in the non-blocking manner.
Instance Attribute Details
#sync ⇒ Object
The “sync mode” of the SSLSocket.
See IO#sync for full details.
30 31 32 |
# File 'lib/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 String#to_s.
392 393 394 395 |
# File 'lib/openssl/buffering.rb', line 392 def <<(s) do_write(s) self end |
#close ⇒ Object
Closes the SSLSocket and flushes any unwritten data.
455 456 457 458 |
# File 'lib/openssl/buffering.rb', line 455 def close flush rescue nil sysclose end |
#each(eol = $/) ⇒ Object Also known as: each_line
Executes the block for every line in the stream where lines are separated by eol
.
See also #gets
226 227 228 229 230 |
# File 'lib/openssl/buffering.rb', line 226 def each(eol=$/) while line = self.gets(eol) yield line end end |
#each_byte ⇒ Object
Calls the given block once for each byte in the stream.
267 268 269 270 271 |
# File 'lib/openssl/buffering.rb', line 267 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.
298 299 300 301 |
# File 'lib/openssl/buffering.rb', line 298 def eof? fill_rbuff if !@eof && @rbuffer.empty? @eof && @rbuffer.empty? end |
#flush ⇒ Object
Flushes buffered data to the SSLSocket.
443 444 445 446 447 448 449 450 |
# File 'lib/openssl/buffering.rb', line 443 def flush osync = @sync @sync = true do_write "" return self ensure @sync = osync end |
#getc ⇒ Object
Reads one character from the stream. Returns nil if called at end of file.
260 261 262 |
# File 'lib/openssl/buffering.rb', line 260 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 $_.
Unlike IO#gets the separator must be provided if a limit is provided.
202 203 204 205 206 207 208 209 210 211 212 213 214 215 216 217 218 |
# File 'lib/openssl/buffering.rb', line 202 def gets(eol=$/, 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 size && limit && limit >= 0 size = [size, limit].min end consume_rbuff(size) end |
#initialize ⇒ Object
Creates an instance of OpenSSL’s buffering IO module.
40 41 42 43 44 45 |
# File 'lib/openssl/buffering.rb', line 40 def initialize(*) super @eof = false @rbuffer = "" @sync = @io.sync end |
#print(*args) ⇒ Object
Writes args
to the stream.
See IO#print for full details.
422 423 424 425 426 427 |
# File 'lib/openssl/buffering.rb', line 422 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.
435 436 437 438 |
# File 'lib/openssl/buffering.rb', line 435 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.
402 403 404 405 406 407 408 409 410 411 412 413 414 415 |
# File 'lib/openssl/buffering.rb', line 402 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.
87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 |
# File 'lib/openssl/buffering.rb', line 87 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 ‘exception: false`, the options hash allows you to indicate that read_nonblock should not raise an IO::Wait*able exception, but return the symbol :wait_writable or :wait_readable instead.
171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 181 182 183 184 185 186 187 188 189 |
# File 'lib/openssl/buffering.rb', line 171 def read_nonblock(maxlen, buf=nil, exception: true) if maxlen == 0 if buf buf.clear return buf else return "" end end if @rbuffer.empty? return sysread_nonblock(maxlen, buf, exception: exception) end ret = consume_rbuff(maxlen) if buf buf.replace(ret) ret = buf end ret end |
#readchar ⇒ Object
Reads a one-character string from the stream. Raises an EOFError at end of file.
277 278 279 280 |
# File 'lib/openssl/buffering.rb', line 277 def readchar raise EOFError if eof? getc end |
#readline(eol = $/) ⇒ Object
Reads a line from the stream which is separated by eol
.
Raises EOFError if at end of file.
251 252 253 254 |
# File 'lib/openssl/buffering.rb', line 251 def readline(eol=$/) raise EOFError if eof? gets(eol) end |
#readlines(eol = $/) ⇒ Object
Reads lines from the stream which are separated by eol
.
See also #gets
238 239 240 241 242 243 244 |
# File 'lib/openssl/buffering.rb', line 238 def readlines(eol=$/) 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.
114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 |
# File 'lib/openssl/buffering.rb', line 114 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 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).
290 291 292 |
# File 'lib/openssl/buffering.rb', line 290 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 String#to_s. Returns the number of bytes written.
341 342 343 344 |
# File 'lib/openssl/buffering.rb', line 341 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 ‘exception: false`, the options hash allows you to indicate that write_nonblock should not raise an IO::Wait*able exception, but return the symbol :wait_writable or :wait_readable instead.
383 384 385 386 |
# File 'lib/openssl/buffering.rb', line 383 def write_nonblock(s, exception: true) flush syswrite_nonblock(s, exception: exception) end |