1=pod 2 3=head1 NAME 4 5ossl-guide-libssl-introduction, ssl 6- OpenSSL Guide: An introduction to libssl 7 8=head1 INTRODUCTION 9 10The OpenSSL C<libssl> library provides implementations of several secure network 11communications protocols. Specifically it provides SSL/TLS (SSLv3, TLSv1, 12TLSv1.1, TLSv1.2 and TLSv1.3), DTLS (DTLSv1 and DTLSv1.2) and QUIC (client side 13only). The library depends on C<libcrypto> for its underlying cryptographic 14operations (see L<ossl-guide-libcrypto-introduction(7)>). 15 16The set of APIs supplied by C<libssl> is common across all of these different 17network protocols, so a developer familiar with writing applications using one 18of these protocols should be able to transition to using another with relative 19ease. 20 21An application written to use C<libssl> will include the F<< <openssl/ssl.h> >> 22header file and will typically use two main data structures, i.e. B<SSL> and 23B<SSL_CTX>. 24 25An B<SSL> object is used to represent a connection to a remote peer. Once a 26connection with a remote peer has been established data can be exchanged with 27that peer. 28 29When using DTLS any data that is exchanged uses "datagram" semantics, i.e. 30the packets of data can be delivered in any order, and they are not guaranteed 31to arrive at all. In this case the B<SSL> object used for the connection is also 32used for exchanging data with the peer. 33 34Both TLS and QUIC support the concept of a "stream" of data. Data sent via a 35stream is guaranteed to be delivered in order without any data loss. A stream 36can be uni- or bi-directional. 37 38SSL/TLS only supports one stream of data per connection and it is always 39bi-directional. In this case the B<SSL> object used for the connection also 40represents that stream. See L<ossl-guide-tls-introduction(7)> for more 41information. 42 43The QUIC protocol can support multiple streams per connection and they can be 44uni- or bi-directional. In this case an B<SSL> object can represent the 45underlying connection, or a stream, or both. Where multiple streams are in use 46a separate B<SSL> object is used for each one. See 47L<ossl-guide-quic-introduction(7)> for more information. 48 49An B<SSL_CTX> object is used to create the B<SSL> object for the underlying 50connection. A single B<SSL_CTX> object can be used to create many connections 51(each represented by a separate B<SSL> object). Many API functions in libssl 52exist in two forms: one that takes an B<SSL_CTX> and one that takes an B<SSL>. 53Typically settings that you apply to the B<SSL_CTX> will then be inherited by 54any B<SSL> object that you create from it. Alternatively you can apply settings 55directly to the B<SSL> object without affecting other B<SSL> objects. Note that 56you should not normally make changes to an B<SSL_CTX> after the first B<SSL> 57object has been created from it. 58 59=head1 DATA STRUCTURES 60 61As well as B<SSL_CTX> and B<SSL> there are a number of other data structures 62that an application may need to use. They are summarised below. 63 64=over 4 65 66=item B<SSL_METHOD> (SSL Method) 67 68This structure is used to indicate the kind of connection you want to make, e.g. 69whether it is to represent the client or the server, and whether it is to use 70SSL/TLS, DTLS or QUIC (client only). It is passed as a parameter when creating 71the B<SSL_CTX>. 72 73=item B<SSL_SESSION> (SSL Session) 74 75After establishing a connection with a peer the agreed cryptographic material 76can be reused to create future connections with the same peer more rapidly. The 77set of data used for such a future connection establishment attempt is collected 78together into an B<SSL_SESSION> object. A single successful connection with a 79peer may generate zero or more such B<SSL_SESSION> objects for use in future 80connection attempts. 81 82=item B<SSL_CIPHER> (SSL Cipher) 83 84During connection establishment the client and server agree upon cryptographic 85algorithms they are going to use for encryption and other uses. A single set 86of cryptographic algorithms that are to be used together is known as a 87ciphersuite. Such a set is represented by an B<SSL_CIPHER> object. 88 89The set of available ciphersuites that can be used are configured in the 90B<SSL_CTX> or B<SSL>. 91 92=back 93 94=head1 FURTHER READING 95 96See L<ossl-guide-tls-introduction(7)> for an introduction to the SSL/TLS 97protocol and L<ossl-guide-quic-introduction(7)> for an introduction to QUIC. 98 99See L<ossl-guide-libcrypto-introduction(7)> for an introduction to C<libcrypto>. 100 101=head1 SEE ALSO 102 103L<ossl-guide-libcrypto-introduction(7)>, L<ossl-guide-tls-introduction(7)>, 104L<ossl-guide-quic-introduction(7)> 105 106=head1 COPYRIGHT 107 108Copyright 2000-2023 The OpenSSL Project Authors. All Rights Reserved. 109 110Licensed under the Apache License 2.0 (the "License"). You may not use 111this file except in compliance with the License. You can obtain a copy 112in the file LICENSE in the source distribution or at 113L<https://www.openssl.org/source/license.html>. 114 115=cut 116