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1 | =pod | |
2 | ||
3 | =head1 NAME | |
4 | ||
5 | OSSL_HTTP_open, | |
6 | OSSL_HTTP_bio_cb_t, | |
7 | OSSL_HTTP_proxy_connect, | |
8 | OSSL_HTTP_set1_request, | |
9 | OSSL_HTTP_exchange, | |
10 | OSSL_HTTP_get, | |
11 | OSSL_HTTP_transfer, | |
12 | OSSL_HTTP_close | |
13 | - HTTP client high-level functions | |
14 | ||
15 | =head1 SYNOPSIS | |
16 | ||
17 | #include <openssl/http.h> | |
18 | ||
19 | typedef BIO *(*OSSL_HTTP_bio_cb_t)(BIO *bio, void *arg, | |
20 | int connect, int detail); | |
21 | OSSL_HTTP_REQ_CTX *OSSL_HTTP_open(const char *server, const char *port, | |
22 | const char *proxy, const char *no_proxy, | |
23 | int use_ssl, BIO *bio, BIO *rbio, | |
24 | OSSL_HTTP_bio_cb_t bio_update_fn, void *arg, | |
25 | int buf_size, int overall_timeout); | |
26 | int OSSL_HTTP_proxy_connect(BIO *bio, const char *server, const char *port, | |
27 | const char *proxyuser, const char *proxypass, | |
28 | int timeout, BIO *bio_err, const char *prog); | |
29 | int OSSL_HTTP_set1_request(OSSL_HTTP_REQ_CTX *rctx, const char *path, | |
30 | const STACK_OF(CONF_VALUE) *headers, | |
31 | const char *content_type, BIO *req, | |
32 | const char *expected_content_type, int expect_asn1, | |
33 | size_t max_resp_len, int timeout, int keep_alive); | |
34 | BIO *OSSL_HTTP_exchange(OSSL_HTTP_REQ_CTX *rctx, char **redirection_url); | |
35 | BIO *OSSL_HTTP_get(const char *url, const char *proxy, const char *no_proxy, | |
36 | BIO *bio, BIO *rbio, | |
37 | OSSL_HTTP_bio_cb_t bio_update_fn, void *arg, | |
38 | int buf_size, const STACK_OF(CONF_VALUE) *headers, | |
39 | const char *expected_content_type, int expect_asn1, | |
40 | size_t max_resp_len, int timeout); | |
41 | BIO *OSSL_HTTP_transfer(OSSL_HTTP_REQ_CTX **prctx, | |
42 | const char *server, const char *port, | |
43 | const char *path, int use_ssl, | |
44 | const char *proxy, const char *no_proxy, | |
45 | BIO *bio, BIO *rbio, | |
46 | OSSL_HTTP_bio_cb_t bio_update_fn, void *arg, | |
47 | int buf_size, const STACK_OF(CONF_VALUE) *headers, | |
48 | const char *content_type, BIO *req, | |
49 | const char *expected_content_type, int expect_asn1, | |
50 | size_t max_resp_len, int timeout, int keep_alive); | |
51 | int OSSL_HTTP_close(OSSL_HTTP_REQ_CTX *rctx, int ok); | |
52 | ||
53 | =head1 DESCRIPTION | |
54 | ||
55 | OSSL_HTTP_open() initiates an HTTP session using the I<bio> argument if not | |
56 | NULL, else by connecting to a given I<server> optionally via a I<proxy>. | |
57 | ||
58 | Typically the OpenSSL build supports sockets and the I<bio> parameter is NULL. | |
59 | In this case I<rbio> must be NULL as well and the I<server> must be non-NULL. | |
60 | The function creates a network BIO internally using L<BIO_new_connect(3)> | |
61 | for connecting to the given server and the optionally given I<port>, | |
62 | defaulting to 80 for HTTP or 443 for HTTPS. | |
63 | Then this internal BIO is used for setting up a connection | |
64 | and for exchanging one or more request and response. | |
65 | ||
66 | If I<bio> is given and I<rbio> is NULL then this I<bio> is used instead. | |
67 | If both I<bio> and I<rbio> are given (which may be memory BIOs for instance) | |
68 | then no explicit connection is set up, but | |
69 | I<bio> is used for writing requests and I<rbio> for reading responses. | |
70 | As soon as the client has flushed I<bio> the server must be ready to provide | |
71 | a response or indicate a waiting condition via I<rbio>. | |
72 | ||
73 | If I<bio> is given, | |
74 | it is an error to provide non-NULL I<proxy> or I<no_proxy> arguments, | |
75 | while I<server> and I<port> arguments may be given to support diagnostic output. | |
76 | If I<bio> is NULL the optional I<proxy> parameter can be used to set an | |
77 | HTTP(S) proxy to use (unless overridden by "no_proxy" settings). | |
78 | If TLS is not used this defaults to the environment variable C<http_proxy> | |
79 | if set, else C<HTTP_PROXY>. | |
80 | If I<use_ssl> != 0 it defaults to C<https_proxy> if set, else C<HTTPS_PROXY>. | |
81 | An empty proxy string C<""> forbids using a proxy. | |
82 | Otherwise, the format is | |
83 | C<[http[s]://][userinfo@]host[:port][/path][?query][#fragment]>, | |
84 | where any userinfo, path, query, and fragment given is ignored. | |
85 | If the host string is an IPv6 address, it must be enclosed in C<[> and C<]>. | |
86 | The default proxy port number is 80, or 443 in case "https:" is given. | |
87 | The HTTP client functions connect via the given proxy unless the I<server> | |
88 | is found in the optional list I<no_proxy> of proxy hostnames or IP addresses | |
89 | separated by C<,> and/or whitespace (if not NULL; | |
90 | default is the environment variable C<no_proxy> if set, else C<NO_PROXY>). | |
91 | Proxying plain HTTP is supported directly, | |
92 | while using a proxy for HTTPS connections requires a suitable callback function | |
93 | such as OSSL_HTTP_proxy_connect(), described below. | |
94 | ||
95 | If I<use_ssl> is nonzero a TLS connection is requested | |
96 | and the I<bio_update_fn> parameter must be provided. | |
97 | ||
98 | The parameter I<bio_update_fn>, which is optional if I<use_ssl> is 0, | |
99 | may be used to modify the connection BIO used by the HTTP client, | |
100 | but cannot be used when both I<bio> and I<rbio> are given. | |
101 | I<bio_update_fn> is a BIO connect/disconnect callback function with prototype | |
102 | ||
103 | BIO *(*OSSL_HTTP_bio_cb_t)(BIO *bio, void *arg, int connect, int detail) | |
104 | ||
105 | The callback function may modify the BIO provided in the I<bio> argument, | |
106 | whereby it may use an optional custom defined argument I<arg>, | |
107 | which can for instance point to an B<SSL_CTX> structure. | |
108 | During connection establishment, just after calling BIO_do_connect_retry(), the | |
109 | callback function is invoked with the I<connect> argument being 1 and | |
110 | I<detail> being 1 if I<use_ssl> is nonzero (i.e., HTTPS is requested), else 0. | |
111 | On disconnect I<connect> is 0 and I<detail> is 1 if no error occurred, else 0. | |
112 | For instance, on connect the callback may push an SSL BIO to implement HTTPS; | |
113 | after disconnect it may do some diagnostic output and pop and free the SSL BIO. | |
114 | ||
115 | The callback function must return either the potentially modified BIO I<bio> | |
116 | or NULL to indicate failure, in which case it should not modify the BIO. | |
117 | ||
118 | Here is a simple example that supports TLS connections (but not via a proxy): | |
119 | ||
120 | BIO *http_tls_cb(BIO *bio, void *arg, int connect, int detail) | |
121 | { | |
122 | if (connect && detail) { /* connecting with TLS */ | |
123 | SSL_CTX *ctx = (SSL_CTX *)arg; | |
124 | BIO *sbio = BIO_new_ssl(ctx, 1); | |
125 | ||
126 | bio = sbio != NULL ? BIO_push(sbio, bio) : NULL; | |
127 | } else if (!connect) { /* disconnecting */ | |
128 | BIO *hbio; | |
129 | ||
130 | if (!detail) { /* an error has occurred */ | |
131 | /* optionally add diagnostics here */ | |
132 | } | |
133 | BIO_ssl_shutdown(bio); | |
134 | hbio = BIO_pop(bio); | |
135 | BIO_free(bio); /* SSL BIO */ | |
136 | bio = hbio; | |
137 | } | |
138 | return bio; | |
139 | } | |
140 | ||
141 | After disconnect the modified BIO will be deallocated using BIO_free_all(). | |
142 | The optional callback function argument I<arg> is not consumed, | |
143 | so must be freed by the caller when not needed any more. | |
144 | ||
145 | The I<buf_size> parameter specifies the response header maximum line length. | |
146 | A value <= 0 means that the B<OSSL_HTTP_DEFAULT_MAX_LINE_LEN> (4KiB) is used. | |
147 | I<buf_size> is also used as the number of content bytes that are read at a time. | |
148 | ||
149 | If the I<overall_timeout> parameter is > 0 this indicates the maximum number of | |
150 | seconds the overall HTTP transfer (i.e., connection setup if needed, | |
151 | sending requests, and receiving responses) is allowed to take until completion. | |
152 | A value <= 0 enables waiting indefinitely, i.e., no timeout. | |
153 | ||
154 | OSSL_HTTP_proxy_connect() may be used by an above BIO connect callback function | |
155 | to set up an SSL/TLS connection via an HTTPS proxy. | |
156 | It promotes the given BIO I<bio> representing a connection | |
157 | pre-established with a TLS proxy using the HTTP CONNECT method, | |
158 | optionally using proxy client credentials I<proxyuser> and I<proxypass>, | |
159 | to connect with TLS protection ultimately to I<server> and I<port>. | |
160 | If the I<port> argument is NULL or the empty string it defaults to "443". | |
161 | If the I<timeout> parameter is > 0 this indicates the maximum number of | |
162 | seconds the connection setup is allowed to take. | |
163 | A value <= 0 enables waiting indefinitely, i.e., no timeout. | |
164 | Since this function is typically called by applications such as | |
165 | L<openssl-s_client(1)> it uses the I<bio_err> and I<prog> parameters (unless | |
166 | NULL) to print additional diagnostic information in a user-oriented way. | |
167 | ||
168 | OSSL_HTTP_set1_request() sets up in I<rctx> the request header and content data | |
169 | and expectations on the response using the following parameters. | |
170 | If <rctx> indicates using a proxy for HTTP (but not HTTPS), the server host | |
171 | (and optionally port) needs to be placed in the header; thus it must be present | |
172 | in I<rctx>. | |
173 | For backward compatibility, the server (and optional port) may also be given in | |
174 | the I<path> argument beginning with C<http://> (thus giving an absoluteURI). | |
175 | If I<path> is NULL it defaults to "/". | |
176 | If I<req> is NULL the HTTP GET method will be used to send the request | |
177 | else HTTP POST with the contents of I<req> and optional I<content_type>, where | |
178 | the length of the data in I<req> does not need to be determined in advance: the | |
179 | BIO will be read on-the-fly while sending the request, which supports streaming. | |
180 | The optional list I<headers> may contain additional custom HTTP header lines. | |
181 | The I<max_resp_len> parameter specifies the maximum allowed | |
182 | response content length, where the value 0 indicates no limit. | |
183 | For the meaning of the I<expected_content_type>, I<expect_asn1>, I<timeout>, | |
184 | and I<keep_alive> parameters, see L<OSSL_HTTP_REQ_CTX_set_expected(3)>. | |
185 | ||
186 | OSSL_HTTP_exchange() exchanges any form of HTTP request and response | |
187 | as specified by I<rctx>, which must include both connection and request data, | |
188 | typically set up using OSSL_HTTP_open() and OSSL_HTTP_set1_request(). | |
189 | It implements the core of the functions described below. | |
190 | If the HTTP method is GET and I<redirection_url> | |
191 | is not NULL the latter pointer is used to provide any new location that | |
192 | the server may return with HTTP code 301 (MOVED_PERMANENTLY) or 302 (FOUND). | |
193 | In this case the function returns NULL and the caller is | |
194 | responsible for deallocating the URL with L<OPENSSL_free(3)>. | |
195 | If the response header contains one or more C<Content-Length> lines and/or | |
196 | an ASN.1-encoded response is expected, which should include a total length, | |
197 | the length indications received are checked for consistency | |
198 | and for not exceeding any given maximum response length. | |
199 | If an ASN.1-encoded response is expected, the function returns on success | |
200 | the contents buffered in a memory BIO, which does not support streaming. | |
201 | Otherwise it returns directly the read BIO that holds the response contents, | |
202 | which allows a response of indefinite length and may support streaming. | |
203 | The caller is responsible for freeing the BIO pointer obtained. | |
204 | ||
205 | OSSL_HTTP_get() uses HTTP GET to obtain data from I<bio> if non-NULL, | |
206 | else from the server contained in the I<url>, and returns it as a BIO. | |
207 | It supports redirection via HTTP status code 301 or 302. It is meant for | |
208 | transfers with a single round trip, so does not support persistent connections. | |
209 | If I<bio> is non-NULL, any host and port components in the I<url> are not used | |
210 | for connecting but the hostname is used, as usual, for the C<Host> header. | |
211 | Any userinfo and fragment components in the I<url> are ignored. | |
212 | Any query component is handled as part of the path component. | |
213 | If the scheme component of the I<url> is C<https> a TLS connection is requested | |
214 | and the I<bio_update_fn>, as described for OSSL_HTTP_open(), must be provided. | |
215 | Also the remaining parameters are interpreted as described for OSSL_HTTP_open() | |
216 | and OSSL_HTTP_set1_request(), respectively. | |
217 | The caller is responsible for freeing the BIO pointer obtained. | |
218 | ||
219 | OSSL_HTTP_transfer() exchanges an HTTP request and response | |
220 | over a connection managed via I<prctx> without supporting redirection. | |
221 | It combines OSSL_HTTP_open(), OSSL_HTTP_set1_request(), OSSL_HTTP_exchange(), | |
222 | and OSSL_HTTP_close(). | |
223 | If I<prctx> is not NULL it reuses any open connection represented by a non-NULL | |
224 | I<*prctx>. It keeps the connection open if a persistent connection is requested | |
225 | or required and this was granted by the server, else it closes the connection | |
226 | and assigns NULL to I<*prctx>. | |
227 | The remaining parameters are interpreted as described for OSSL_HTTP_open() | |
228 | and OSSL_HTTP_set1_request(), respectively. | |
229 | The caller is responsible for freeing the BIO pointer obtained. | |
230 | ||
231 | OSSL_HTTP_close() closes the connection and releases I<rctx>. | |
232 | The I<ok> parameter is passed to any BIO update function | |
233 | given during setup as described above for OSSL_HTTP_open(). | |
234 | It must be 1 if no error occurred during the HTTP transfer and 0 otherwise. | |
235 | ||
236 | =head1 NOTES | |
237 | ||
238 | The names of the environment variables used by this implementation: | |
239 | C<http_proxy>, C<HTTP_PROXY>, C<https_proxy>, C<HTTPS_PROXY>, C<no_proxy>, and | |
240 | C<NO_PROXY>, have been chosen for maximal compatibility with | |
241 | other HTTP client implementations such as wget, curl, and git. | |
242 | ||
243 | When built with tracing enabled, OSSL_HTTP_transfer() and all functions using it | |
244 | may be traced using B<OSSL_TRACE_CATEGORY_HTTP>. | |
245 | See also L<OSSL_trace_enabled(3)> and L<openssl-env(7)>. | |
246 | ||
247 | =head1 RETURN VALUES | |
248 | ||
249 | OSSL_HTTP_open() returns on success a B<OSSL_HTTP_REQ_CTX>, else NULL. | |
250 | ||
251 | OSSL_HTTP_proxy_connect() and OSSL_HTTP_set1_request() | |
252 | return 1 on success, 0 on error. | |
253 | ||
254 | On success, OSSL_HTTP_exchange(), OSSL_HTTP_get(), and OSSL_HTTP_transfer() | |
255 | return a memory BIO that buffers all the data received if an ASN.1-encoded | |
256 | response is expected, otherwise a BIO that may support streaming. | |
257 | The BIO must be freed by the caller. | |
258 | On failure, they return NULL. | |
259 | Failure conditions include connection/transfer timeout, parse errors, etc. | |
260 | The caller is responsible for freeing the BIO pointer obtained. | |
261 | ||
262 | OSSL_HTTP_close() returns 0 if anything went wrong while disconnecting, else 1. | |
263 | ||
264 | =head1 SEE ALSO | |
265 | ||
266 | L<OSSL_HTTP_parse_url(3)>, L<BIO_new_connect(3)>, | |
267 | L<ASN1_item_i2d_mem_bio(3)>, L<ASN1_item_d2i_bio(3)>, | |
268 | L<OSSL_HTTP_REQ_CTX_set_expected(3)>, | |
269 | L<OSSL_HTTP_is_alive(3)>, | |
270 | L<OSSL_trace_enabled(3)>, and L<openssl-env(7)>. | |
271 | ||
272 | =head1 HISTORY | |
273 | ||
274 | All the functions described here were added in OpenSSL 3.0. | |
275 | ||
276 | =head1 COPYRIGHT | |
277 | ||
278 | Copyright 2019-2025 The OpenSSL Project Authors. All Rights Reserved. | |
279 | ||
280 | Licensed under the Apache License 2.0 (the "License"). You may not use | |
281 | this file except in compliance with the License. You can obtain a copy | |
282 | in the file LICENSE in the source distribution or at | |
283 | L<https://www.openssl.org/source/license.html>. | |
284 | ||
285 | =cut |