]> git.ipfire.org Git - thirdparty/openssl.git/blob - doc/man3/OSSL_HTTP_transfer.pod
OSSL_HTTP_transfer.pod: Fix omission documenting the 'ok' parameter of OSSL_HTTP_close()
[thirdparty/openssl.git] / doc / man3 / OSSL_HTTP_transfer.pod
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
60 library creates a network BIO internally for connecting to the given I<server>
61 at the specified I<port> if any, defaulting to 80 for HTTP or 443 for HTTPS.
62 Then this internal BIO is used for setting up a connection
63 and for exchanging one or more request and response.
64 If I<bio> is given and I<rbio> is NULL then this I<bio> is used instead.
65 If both I<bio> and I<rbio> are given (which may be memory BIOs for instance)
66 then no explicit connection is set up, but
67 I<bio> is used for writing requests and I<rbio> for reading responses.
68 As soon as the client has flushed I<bio> the server must be ready to provide
69 a response or indicate a waiting condition via I<rbio>.
70
71 If I<bio> is NULL the optional I<proxy> parameter can be used to set an
72 HTTP(S) proxy to use (unless overridden by "no_proxy" settings).
73 If TLS is not used this defaults to the environment variable C<http_proxy>
74 if set, else C<HTTP_PROXY>.
75 If I<use_ssl> != 0 it defaults to C<https_proxy> if set, else C<HTTPS_PROXY>.
76 An empty proxy string C<""> forbids using a proxy.
77 Else the format is
78 C<[http[s]://][userinfo@]host[:port][/path][?query][#fragment]>,
79 where any userinfo, path, query, and fragment given is ignored.
80 The default proxy port number is 80, or 443 in case "https:" is given.
81 The HTTP client functions connect via the given proxy unless the I<server>
82 is found in the optional list I<no_proxy> of proxy hostnames (if not NULL;
83 default is the environment variable C<no_proxy> if set, else C<NO_PROXY>).
84 Proxying plain HTTP is supported directly,
85 while using a proxy for HTTPS connections requires a suitable callback function
86 such as OSSL_HTTP_proxy_connect(), described below.
87
88 If I<use_ssl> is nonzero a TLS connection is requested
89 and the I<bio_update_fn> parameter must be provided.
90
91 The parameter I<bio_update_fn>, which is optional if I<use_ssl> is 0,
92 may be used to modify the connection BIO used by the HTTP client,
93 but cannot be used when both I<bio> and I<rbio> are given.
94 I<bio_update_fn> is a BIO connect/disconnect callback function with prototype
95
96 BIO *(*OSSL_HTTP_bio_cb_t)(BIO *bio, void *arg, int connect, int detail)
97
98 The callback may modify the HTTP BIO provided in the I<bio> argument,
99 whereby it may make use of a custom defined argument I<arg>,
100 which may for instance refer to an I<SSL_CTX> structure.
101 During connection establishment, just after calling BIO_do_connect_retry(),
102 the function is invoked with the I<connect> argument being 1 and the I<detail>
103 argument being 1 if HTTPS is requested, i.e., SSL/TLS should be enabled, else 0.
104 On disconnect I<connect> is 0 and I<detail> is 1 if no error occurred, else 0.
105 For instance, on connect the function may prepend a TLS BIO to implement HTTPS;
106 after disconnect it may do some diagnostic output and/or specific cleanup.
107 The function should return NULL to indicate failure.
108 Here is a simple example that supports TLS connections (but not via a proxy):
109
110 BIO *http_tls_cb(BIO *hbio, void *arg, int connect, int detail)
111 {
112 if (connect && detail) { /* connecting with TLS */
113 SSL_CTX *ctx = (SSL_CTX *)arg;
114 BIO *sbio = BIO_new_ssl(ctx, 1);
115
116 hbio = sbio != NULL ? BIO_push(sbio, hbio) : NULL;
117 } else if (!connect && !detail) { /* disconnecting after error */
118 /* optionally add diagnostics here */
119 }
120 return hbio;
121 }
122
123 After disconnect the modified BIO will be deallocated using BIO_free_all().
124
125 The I<buf_size> parameter specifies the response header maximum line length.
126 A value <= 0 means that the B<OSSL_HTTP_DEFAULT_MAX_LINE_LEN> (4KiB) is used.
127 I<buf_size> is also used as the number of content bytes that are read at a time.
128
129 If the I<overall_timeout> parameter is > 0 this indicates the maximum number of
130 seconds the overall HTTP transfer (i.e., connection setup if needed,
131 sending requests, and receiving responses) is allowed to take until completion.
132 A value <= 0 enables waiting indefinitely, i.e., no timeout.
133
134 OSSL_HTTP_proxy_connect() may be used by an above BIO connect callback function
135 to set up an SSL/TLS connection via an HTTPS proxy.
136 It promotes the given BIO I<bio> representing a connection
137 pre-established with a TLS proxy using the HTTP CONNECT method,
138 optionally using proxy client credentials I<proxyuser> and I<proxypass>,
139 to connect with TLS protection ultimately to I<server> and I<port>.
140 If the I<port> argument is NULL or the empty string it defaults to "443".
141 If the I<timeout> parameter is > 0 this indicates the maximum number of
142 seconds the connection setup is allowed to take.
143 A value <= 0 enables waiting indefinitely, i.e., no timeout.
144 Since this function is typically called by applications such as
145 L<openssl-s_client(1)> it uses the I<bio_err> and I<prog> parameters (unless
146 NULL) to print additional diagnostic information in a user-oriented way.
147
148 OSSL_HTTP_set1_request() sets up in I<rctx> the request header and content data
149 and expectations on the response using the following parameters.
150 If I<path> is NULL it defaults to "/".
151 If I<req> is NULL the HTTP GET method will be used to send the request
152 else HTTP POST with the contents of I<req> and optional I<content_type>, where
153 the length of the data in I<req> does not need to be determined in advance: the
154 BIO will be read on-the-fly while sending the request, which supports streaming.
155 The optional list I<headers> may contain additional custom HTTP header lines.
156 If the parameter I<expected_content_type>
157 is not NULL then the client will check that the given content type string
158 is included in the HTTP header of the response and return an error if not.
159 If the I<expect_asn1> parameter is nonzero,
160 a structure in ASN.1 encoding will be expected as response content.
161 The I<max_resp_len> parameter specifies the maximum allowed
162 response content length, where the value 0 indicates no limit.
163 If the I<timeout> parameter is > 0 this indicates the maximum number of seconds
164 the subsequent HTTP transfer (sending the request and receiving a response)
165 is allowed to take.
166 A value of 0 enables waiting indefinitely, i.e., no timeout.
167 A value < 0 indicates that the I<overall_timeout> parameter value given
168 when opening the HTTP transfer will be used instead.
169 If I<keep_alive> is 0 the connection is not kept open
170 after receiving a response, which is the default behavior for HTTP 1.0.
171 If the value is 1 or 2 then a persistent connection is requested.
172 If the value is 2 then a persistent connection is required,
173 i.e., an error occurs in case the server does not grant it.
174
175 OSSL_HTTP_exchange() exchanges any form of HTTP request and response
176 as specified by I<rctx>, which must include both connection and request data,
177 typically set up using OSSL_HTTP_open() and OSSL_HTTP_set1_request().
178 It implements the core of the functions described below.
179 If the HTTP method is GET and I<redirection_url>
180 is not NULL the latter pointer is used to provide any new location that
181 the server may return with HTTP code 301 (MOVED_PERMANENTLY) or 302 (FOUND).
182 In this case the function returns NULL and the caller is
183 responsible for deallocating the URL with L<OPENSSL_free(3)>.
184 If the response header contains one or more "Content-Length" header lines and/or
185 an ASN.1-encoded response is expected, which should include a total length,
186 the length indications received are checked for consistency
187 and for not exceeding any given maximum response length.
188 If an ASN.1-encoded response is expected, the function returns on success
189 the contents as a memory BIO, which does not support streaming.
190 Otherwise it returns directly the read BIO that holds the response contents,
191 which allows a response of indefinite length and may support streaming.
192 The caller is responsible for freeing the BIO pointer obtained.
193
194 OSSL_HTTP_get() uses HTTP GET to obtain data from I<bio> if non-NULL,
195 else from the server contained in the I<url>, and returns it as a BIO.
196 It supports redirection via HTTP status code 301 or 302. It is meant for
197 transfers with a single round trip, so does not support persistent connections.
198 If I<bio> is non-NULL, any host and port components in the I<url> are not used
199 for connecting but the hostname is used, as usual, for the C<Host> header.
200 Any userinfo and fragment components in the I<url> are ignored.
201 Any query component is handled as part of the path component.
202 If the scheme component of the I<url> is C<https> a TLS connection is requested
203 and the I<bio_update_fn>, as described for OSSL_HTTP_open(), must be provided.
204 Also the remaining parameters are interpreted as described for OSSL_HTTP_open()
205 and OSSL_HTTP_set1_request(), respectively.
206 The caller is responsible for freeing the BIO pointer obtained.
207
208 OSSL_HTTP_transfer() exchanges an HTTP request and response
209 over a connection managed via I<prctx> without supporting redirection.
210 It combines OSSL_HTTP_open(), OSSL_HTTP_set1_request(), OSSL_HTTP_exchange(),
211 and OSSL_HTTP_close().
212 If I<prctx> is not NULL it reuses any open connection represented by a non-NULL
213 I<*prctx>. It keeps the connection open if a persistent connection is requested
214 or required and this was granted by the server, else it closes the connection
215 and assigns NULL to I<*prctx>.
216 The remaining parameters are interpreted as described for OSSL_HTTP_open()
217 and OSSL_HTTP_set1_request(), respectively.
218 The caller is responsible for freeing the BIO pointer obtained.
219
220 OSSL_HTTP_close() closes the connection and releases I<rctx>.
221 The I<ok> parameter is passed to any BIO update function
222 given during setup as described above for OSSL_HTTP_open().
223 It must be 1 if no error occurred during the HTTP transfer and 0 otherwise.
224
225 =head1 NOTES
226
227 The names of the environment variables used by this implementation:
228 C<http_proxy>, C<HTTP_PROXY>, C<https_proxy>, C<HTTPS_PROXY>, C<no_proxy>, and
229 C<NO_PROXY>, have been chosen for maximal compatibility with
230 other HTTP client implementations such as wget, curl, and git.
231
232 =head1 RETURN VALUES
233
234 OSSL_HTTP_open() returns on success a B<OSSL_HTTP_REQ_CTX>, else NULL.
235
236 OSSL_HTTP_proxy_connect() and OSSL_HTTP_set1_request()
237 return 1 on success, 0 on error.
238
239 On success, OSSL_HTTP_exchange(), OSSL_HTTP_get(), and OSSL_HTTP_transfer()
240 return a memory BIO containing the data received if an ASN.1-encoded response
241 is expected, else a BIO that may support streaming.
242 The BIO must be freed by the caller.
243 On failure, they return NULL.
244 Failure conditions include connection/transfer timeout, parse errors, etc.
245 The caller is responsible for freeing the BIO pointer obtained.
246
247 OSSL_HTTP_close() returns 0 if anything went wrong while disconnecting, else 1.
248
249 =head1 SEE ALSO
250
251 L<OSSL_HTTP_parse_url(3)>, L<BIO_set_conn_port(3)>
252 L<ASN1_item_i2d_mem_bio(3)>, L<ASN1_item_d2i_bio(3)>,
253 L<OSSL_HTTP_is_alive(3)>
254
255 =head1 HISTORY
256
257 All the functions described here were added in OpenSSL 3.0.
258
259 =head1 COPYRIGHT
260
261 Copyright 2019-2021 The OpenSSL Project Authors. All Rights Reserved.
262
263 Licensed under the Apache License 2.0 (the "License"). You may not use
264 this file except in compliance with the License. You can obtain a copy
265 in the file LICENSE in the source distribution or at
266 L<https://www.openssl.org/source/license.html>.
267
268 =cut