1=pod 2 3=begin comment 4 5NB: Changes to the source code samples in this file should also be reflected in 6demos/guide/tls-client-non-block.c 7 8=end comment 9 10=head1 NAME 11 12ossl-guide-tls-client-non-block 13- OpenSSL Guide: Writing a simple nonblocking TLS client 14 15=head1 SIMPLE NONBLOCKING TLS CLIENT EXAMPLE 16 17This page will build on the example developed on the 18L<ossl-guide-tls-client-block(7)> page which demonstrates how to write a simple 19blocking TLS client. On this page we will amend that demo code so that it 20supports a nonblocking socket. 21 22The complete source code for this example nonblocking TLS client is available 23in the B<demos/guide> directory of the OpenSSL source distribution in the file 24B<tls-client-non-block.c>. It is also available online at 25L<https://github.com/openssl/openssl/blob/master/demos/guide/tls-client-non-block.c>. 26 27As we saw in the previous example a blocking socket is one which waits (blocks) 28until data is available to read if you attempt to read from it when there is no 29data yet. Similarly it waits when writing if the socket is currently unable to 30write at the moment. This can simplify the development of code because you do 31not have to worry about what to do in these cases. The execution of the code 32will simply stop until it is able to continue. However in many cases you do not 33want this behaviour. Rather than stopping and waiting your application may need 34to go and do other tasks whilst the socket is unable to read/write, for example 35updating a GUI or performing operations on some other socket. 36 37With a nonblocking socket attempting to read or write to a socket that is 38currently unable to read or write will return immediately with a non-fatal 39error. Although OpenSSL does the reading/writing to the socket this nonblocking 40behaviour is propagated up to the application so that OpenSSL I/O functions such 41as L<SSL_read_ex(3)> or L<SSL_write_ex(3)> will not block. 42 43Since this page is building on the example developed on the 44L<ossl-guide-tls-client-block(7)> page we assume that you are familiar with it 45and we only explain how this example differs. 46 47=head2 Setting the socket to be nonblocking 48 49The first step in writing an application that supports nonblocking is to set 50the socket into nonblocking mode. A socket will be default be blocking. The 51exact details on how to do this can differ from one platform to another. 52Fortunately OpenSSL offers a portable function that will do this for you: 53 54 /* Set to nonblocking mode */ 55 if (!BIO_socket_nbio(sock, 1)) { 56 sock = -1; 57 continue; 58 } 59 60You do not have to use OpenSSL's function for this. You can of course directly 61call whatever functions that your Operating System provides for this purpose on 62your platform. 63 64=head2 Performing work while waiting for the socket 65 66In a nonblocking application you will need work to perform in the event that 67we want to read or write to the socket, but we are currently unable to. In fact 68this is the whole point of using a nonblocking socket, i.e. to give the 69application the opportunity to do something else. Whatever it is that the 70application has to do, it must also be prepared to come back and retry the 71operation that it previously attempted periodically to see if it can now 72complete. Ideally it would only do this in the event that the state of the 73underlying socket has actually changed (e.g. become readable where it wasn't 74before), but this does not have to be the case. It can retry at any time. 75 76Note that it is important that you retry exactly the same operation that you 77tried last time. You cannot start something new. For example if you were 78attempting to write the text "Hello World" and the operation failed because the 79socket is currently unable to write, then you cannot then attempt to write 80some other text when you retry the operation. 81 82In this demo application we will create a helper function which simulates doing 83other work. In fact, for the sake of simplicity, it will do nothing except wait 84for the state of the socket to change. 85 86We call our function C<wait_for_activity()> because all it does is wait until 87the underlying socket has become readable or writeable when it wasn't before. 88 89 static void wait_for_activity(SSL *ssl, int write) 90 { 91 fd_set fds; 92 int width, sock; 93 94 /* Get hold of the underlying file descriptor for the socket */ 95 sock = SSL_get_fd(ssl); 96 97 FD_ZERO(&fds); 98 FD_SET(sock, &fds); 99 width = sock + 1; 100 101 /* 102 * Wait until the socket is writeable or readable. We use select here 103 * for the sake of simplicity and portability, but you could equally use 104 * poll/epoll or similar functions 105 * 106 * NOTE: For the purposes of this demonstration code this effectively 107 * makes this demo block until it has something more useful to do. In a 108 * real application you probably want to go and do other work here (e.g. 109 * update a GUI, or service other connections). 110 * 111 * Let's say for example that you want to update the progress counter on 112 * a GUI every 100ms. One way to do that would be to add a 100ms timeout 113 * in the last parameter to "select" below. Then, when select returns, 114 * you check if it did so because of activity on the file descriptors or 115 * because of the timeout. If it is due to the timeout then update the 116 * GUI and then restart the "select". 117 */ 118 if (write) 119 select(width, NULL, &fds, NULL, NULL); 120 else 121 select(width, &fds, NULL, NULL, NULL); 122 } 123 124In this example we are using the C<select> function because it is very simple 125to use and is available on most Operating Systems. However you could use any 126other similar function to do the same thing. C<select> waits for the state of 127the underlying socket(s) to become readable/writeable before returning. It also 128supports a "timeout" (as do most other similar functions) so in your own 129applications you can make use of this to periodically wake up and perform work 130while waiting for the socket state to change. But we don't use that timeout 131capability in this example for the sake of simplicity. 132 133=head2 Handling errors from OpenSSL I/O functions 134 135An application that uses a nonblocking socket will need to be prepared to 136handle errors returned from OpenSSL I/O functions such as L<SSL_read_ex(3)> or 137L<SSL_write_ex(3)>. Errors may be fatal (for example because the underlying 138connection has failed), or non-fatal (for example because we are trying to read 139from the underlying socket but the data has not yet arrived from the peer). 140 141L<SSL_read_ex(3)> and L<SSL_write_ex(3)> will return 0 to indicate an error and 142L<SSL_read(3)> and L<SSL_write(3)> will return 0 or a negative value to indicate 143an error. L<SSL_shutdown(3)> will return a negative value to incidate an error. 144 145In the event of an error an application should call L<SSL_get_error(3)> to find 146out what type of error has occurred. If the error is non-fatal and can be 147retried then L<SSL_get_error(3)> will return B<SSL_ERROR_WANT_READ> or 148B<SSL_ERROR_WANT_WRITE> depending on whether OpenSSL wanted to read to or write 149from the socket but was unable to. Note that a call to L<SSL_read_ex(3)> or 150L<SSL_read(3)> can still generate B<SSL_ERROR_WANT_WRITE> because OpenSSL 151may need to write protocol messages (such as to update cryptographic keys) even 152if the application is only trying to read data. Similarly calls to 153L<SSL_write_ex(3)> or L<SSL_write(3)> might generate B<SSL_ERROR_WANT_READ>. 154 155Another type of non-fatal error that may occur is B<SSL_ERROR_ZERO_RETURN>. This 156indicates an EOF (End-Of-File) which can occur if you attempt to read data from 157an B<SSL> object but the peer has indicated that it will not send any more data 158on it. In this case you may still want to write data to the connection but you 159will not receive any more data. 160 161Fatal errors that may occur are B<SSL_ERROR_SYSCALL> and B<SSL_ERROR_SSL>. These 162indicate that the underlying connection has failed. You should not attempt to 163shut it down with L<SSL_shutdown(3)>. B<SSL_ERROR_SYSCALL> indicates that 164OpenSSL attempted to make a syscall that failed. You can consult B<errno> for 165further details. B<SSL_ERROR_SSL> indicates that some OpenSSL error occurred. You 166can consult the OpenSSL error stack for further details (for example by calling 167L<ERR_print_errors(3)> to print out details of errors that have occurred). 168 169In our demo application we will write a function to handle these errors from 170OpenSSL I/O functions: 171 172 static int handle_io_failure(SSL *ssl, int res) 173 { 174 switch (SSL_get_error(ssl, res)) { 175 case SSL_ERROR_WANT_READ: 176 /* Temporary failure. Wait until we can read and try again */ 177 wait_for_activity(ssl, 0); 178 return 1; 179 180 case SSL_ERROR_WANT_WRITE: 181 /* Temporary failure. Wait until we can write and try again */ 182 wait_for_activity(ssl, 1); 183 return 1; 184 185 case SSL_ERROR_ZERO_RETURN: 186 /* EOF */ 187 return 0; 188 189 case SSL_ERROR_SYSCALL: 190 return -1; 191 192 case SSL_ERROR_SSL: 193 /* 194 * If the failure is due to a verification error we can get more 195 * information about it from SSL_get_verify_result(). 196 */ 197 if (SSL_get_verify_result(ssl) != X509_V_OK) 198 printf("Verify error: %s\n", 199 X509_verify_cert_error_string(SSL_get_verify_result(ssl))); 200 return -1; 201 202 default: 203 return -1; 204 } 205 } 206 207This function takes as arguments the B<SSL> object that represents the 208connection, as well as the return code from the I/O function that failed. In 209the event of a non-fatal failure, it waits until a retry of the I/O operation 210might succeed (by using the C<wait_for_activity()> function that we developed 211in the previous section). It returns 1 in the event of a non-fatal error 212(except EOF), 0 in the event of EOF, or -1 if a fatal error occurred. 213 214=head2 Creating the SSL_CTX and SSL objects 215 216In order to connect to a server we must create B<SSL_CTX> and B<SSL> objects for 217this. The steps do this are the same as for a blocking client and are explained 218on the L<ossl-guide-tls-client-block(7)> page. We won't repeat that information 219here. 220 221=head2 Performing the handshake 222 223As in the demo for a blocking TLS client we use the L<SSL_connect(3)> function 224to perform the TLS handshake with the server. Since we are using a nonblocking 225socket it is very likely that calls to this function will fail with a non-fatal 226error while we are waiting for the server to respond to our handshake messages. 227In such a case we must retry the same L<SSL_connect(3)> call at a later time. 228In this demo we this in a loop: 229 230 /* Do the handshake with the server */ 231 while ((ret = SSL_connect(ssl)) != 1) { 232 if (handle_io_failure(ssl, ret) == 1) 233 continue; /* Retry */ 234 printf("Failed to connect to server\n"); 235 goto end; /* Cannot retry: error */ 236 } 237 238We continually call L<SSL_connect(3)> until it gives us a success response. 239Otherwise we use the C<handle_io_failure()> function that we created earlier to 240work out what we should do next. Note that we do not expect an EOF to occur at 241this stage, so such a response is treated in the same way as a fatal error. 242 243=head2 Sending and receiving data 244 245As with the blocking TLS client demo we use the L<SSL_write_ex(3)> function to 246send data to the server. As with L<SSL_connect(3)> above, because we are using 247a nonblocking socket, this call could fail with a non-fatal error. In that case 248we should retry exactly the same L<SSL_write_ex(3)> call again. Note that the 249parameters must be I<exactly> the same, i.e. the same pointer to the buffer to 250write with the same length. You must not attempt to send different data on a 251retry. An optional mode does exist (B<SSL_MODE_ACCEPT_MOVING_WRITE_BUFFER>) 252which will configure OpenSSL to allow the buffer being written to change from 253one retry to the next. However, in this case, you must still retry exactly the 254same data - even though the buffer that contains that data may change location. 255See L<SSL_CTX_set_mode(3)> for further details. As in the TLS client 256blocking tutorial (L<ossl-guide-tls-client-block(7)>) we write the request 257in three chunks. 258 259 /* Write an HTTP GET request to the peer */ 260 while (!SSL_write_ex(ssl, request_start, strlen(request_start), &written)) { 261 if (handle_io_failure(ssl, 0) == 1) 262 continue; /* Retry */ 263 printf("Failed to write start of HTTP request\n"); 264 goto end; /* Cannot retry: error */ 265 } 266 while (!SSL_write_ex(ssl, hostname, strlen(hostname), &written)) { 267 if (handle_io_failure(ssl, 0) == 1) 268 continue; /* Retry */ 269 printf("Failed to write hostname in HTTP request\n"); 270 goto end; /* Cannot retry: error */ 271 } 272 while (!SSL_write_ex(ssl, request_end, strlen(request_end), &written)) { 273 if (handle_io_failure(ssl, 0) == 1) 274 continue; /* Retry */ 275 printf("Failed to write end of HTTP request\n"); 276 goto end; /* Cannot retry: error */ 277 } 278 279On a write we do not expect to see an EOF response so we treat that case in the 280same way as a fatal error. 281 282Reading a response back from the server is similar: 283 284 do { 285 /* 286 * Get up to sizeof(buf) bytes of the response. We keep reading until 287 * the server closes the connection. 288 */ 289 while (!eof && !SSL_read_ex(ssl, buf, sizeof(buf), &readbytes)) { 290 switch (handle_io_failure(ssl, 0)) { 291 case 1: 292 continue; /* Retry */ 293 case 0: 294 eof = 1; 295 continue; 296 case -1: 297 default: 298 printf("Failed reading remaining data\n"); 299 goto end; /* Cannot retry: error */ 300 } 301 } 302 /* 303 * OpenSSL does not guarantee that the returned data is a string or 304 * that it is NUL terminated so we use fwrite() to write the exact 305 * number of bytes that we read. The data could be non-printable or 306 * have NUL characters in the middle of it. For this simple example 307 * we're going to print it to stdout anyway. 308 */ 309 if (!eof) 310 fwrite(buf, 1, readbytes, stdout); 311 } while (!eof); 312 /* In case the response didn't finish with a newline we add one now */ 313 printf("\n"); 314 315The main difference this time is that it is valid for us to receive an EOF 316response when trying to read data from the server. This will occur when the 317server closes down the connection after sending all the data in its response. 318 319In this demo we just print out all the data we've received back in the response 320from the server. We continue going around the loop until we either encounter a 321fatal error, or we receive an EOF (indicating a graceful finish). 322 323=head2 Shutting down the connection 324 325As in the TLS blocking example we must shutdown the connection when we are 326finished with it. 327 328If our application was initiating the shutdown then we would expect to see 329L<SSL_shutdown(3)> give a return value of 0, and then we would continue to call 330it until we received a return value of 1 (meaning we have successfully completed 331the shutdown). In this particular example we don't expect SSL_shutdown() to 332return 0 because we have already received EOF from the server indicating that it 333has shutdown already. So we just keep calling it until SSL_shutdown() returns 1. 334Since we are using a nonblocking socket we might expect to have to retry this 335operation several times. If L<SSL_shutdown(3)> returns a negative result then we 336must call L<SSL_get_error(3)> to work out what to do next. We use our 337handle_io_failure() function that we developed earlier for this: 338 339 /* 340 * The peer already shutdown gracefully (we know this because of the 341 * SSL_ERROR_ZERO_RETURN (i.e. EOF) above). We should do the same back. 342 */ 343 while ((ret = SSL_shutdown(ssl)) != 1) { 344 if (ret < 0 && handle_io_failure(ssl, ret) == 1) 345 continue; /* Retry */ 346 /* 347 * ret == 0 is unexpected here because that means "we've sent a 348 * close_notify and we're waiting for one back". But we already know 349 * we got one from the peer because of the SSL_ERROR_ZERO_RETURN 350 * (i.e. EOF) above. 351 */ 352 printf("Error shutting down\n"); 353 goto end; /* Cannot retry: error */ 354 } 355 356=head2 Final clean up 357 358As with the blocking TLS client example, once our connection is finished with we 359must free it. The steps to do this for this example are the same as for the 360blocking example, so we won't repeat it here. 361 362=head1 FURTHER READING 363 364See L<ossl-guide-tls-client-block(7)> to read a tutorial on how to write a 365blocking TLS client. See L<ossl-guide-quic-client-block(7)> to see how to do the 366same thing for a QUIC client. 367 368=head1 SEE ALSO 369 370L<ossl-guide-introduction(7)>, L<ossl-guide-libraries-introduction(7)>, 371L<ossl-guide-libssl-introduction(7)>, L<ossl-guide-tls-introduction(7)>, 372L<ossl-guide-tls-client-block(7)>, L<ossl-guide-quic-client-block(7)> 373 374=head1 COPYRIGHT 375 376Copyright 2023 The OpenSSL Project Authors. All Rights Reserved. 377 378Licensed under the Apache License 2.0 (the "License"). You may not use 379this file except in compliance with the License. You can obtain a copy 380in the file LICENSE in the source distribution or at 381L<https://www.openssl.org/source/license.html>. 382 383=cut 384