| =pod |
| |
| =head1 NAME |
| |
| BIO_s_secmem, |
| BIO_s_mem, BIO_set_mem_eof_return, BIO_get_mem_data, BIO_set_mem_buf, |
| BIO_get_mem_ptr, BIO_new_mem_buf - memory BIO |
| |
| =head1 SYNOPSIS |
| |
| #include <openssl/bio.h> |
| |
| const BIO_METHOD *BIO_s_mem(void); |
| const BIO_METHOD *BIO_s_secmem(void); |
| |
| BIO_set_mem_eof_return(BIO *b, int v) |
| long BIO_get_mem_data(BIO *b, char **pp) |
| BIO_set_mem_buf(BIO *b, BUF_MEM *bm, int c) |
| BIO_get_mem_ptr(BIO *b, BUF_MEM **pp) |
| |
| BIO *BIO_new_mem_buf(const void *buf, int len); |
| |
| =head1 DESCRIPTION |
| |
| BIO_s_mem() returns the memory BIO method function. |
| |
| A memory BIO is a source/sink BIO which uses memory for its I/O. Data |
| written to a memory BIO is stored in a BUF_MEM structure which is extended |
| as appropriate to accommodate the stored data. |
| |
| BIO_s_secmem() is like BIO_s_mem() except that the secure heap is used |
| for buffer storage. |
| |
| Any data written to a memory BIO can be recalled by reading from it. |
| Unless the memory BIO is read only any data read from it is deleted from |
| the BIO. |
| |
| Memory BIOs support BIO_gets() and BIO_puts(). |
| |
| If the BIO_CLOSE flag is set when a memory BIO is freed then the underlying |
| BUF_MEM structure is also freed. |
| |
| Calling BIO_reset() on a read write memory BIO clears any data in it if the |
| flag BIO_FLAGS_NONCLEAR_RST is not set. On a read only BIO or if the flag |
| BIO_FLAGS_NONCLEAR_RST is set it restores the BIO to its original state and |
| the data can be read again. |
| |
| BIO_eof() is true if no data is in the BIO. |
| |
| BIO_ctrl_pending() returns the number of bytes currently stored. |
| |
| BIO_set_mem_eof_return() sets the behaviour of memory BIO B<b> when it is |
| empty. If the B<v> is zero then an empty memory BIO will return EOF (that is |
| it will return zero and BIO_should_retry(b) will be false. If B<v> is non |
| zero then it will return B<v> when it is empty and it will set the read retry |
| flag (that is BIO_read_retry(b) is true). To avoid ambiguity with a normal |
| positive return value B<v> should be set to a negative value, typically -1. |
| |
| BIO_get_mem_data() sets *B<pp> to a pointer to the start of the memory BIOs data |
| and returns the total amount of data available. It is implemented as a macro. |
| |
| BIO_set_mem_buf() sets the internal BUF_MEM structure to B<bm> and sets the |
| close flag to B<c>, that is B<c> should be either BIO_CLOSE or BIO_NOCLOSE. |
| It is a macro. |
| |
| BIO_get_mem_ptr() places the underlying BUF_MEM structure in *B<pp>. It is |
| a macro. |
| |
| BIO_new_mem_buf() creates a memory BIO using B<len> bytes of data at B<buf>, |
| if B<len> is -1 then the B<buf> is assumed to be nul terminated and its |
| length is determined by B<strlen>. The BIO is set to a read only state and |
| as a result cannot be written to. This is useful when some data needs to be |
| made available from a static area of memory in the form of a BIO. The |
| supplied data is read directly from the supplied buffer: it is B<not> copied |
| first, so the supplied area of memory must be unchanged until the BIO is freed. |
| |
| =head1 NOTES |
| |
| Writes to memory BIOs will always succeed if memory is available: that is |
| their size can grow indefinitely. |
| |
| Every read from a read write memory BIO will remove the data just read with |
| an internal copy operation, if a BIO contains a lot of data and it is |
| read in small chunks the operation can be very slow. The use of a read only |
| memory BIO avoids this problem. If the BIO must be read write then adding |
| a buffering BIO to the chain will speed up the process. |
| |
| Calling BIO_set_mem_buf() on a BIO created with BIO_new_secmem() will |
| give undefined results, including perhaps a program crash. |
| |
| =head1 BUGS |
| |
| There should be an option to set the maximum size of a memory BIO. |
| |
| =head1 EXAMPLE |
| |
| Create a memory BIO and write some data to it: |
| |
| BIO *mem = BIO_new(BIO_s_mem()); |
| |
| BIO_puts(mem, "Hello World\n"); |
| |
| Create a read only memory BIO: |
| |
| char data[] = "Hello World"; |
| BIO *mem = BIO_new_mem_buf(data, -1); |
| |
| Extract the BUF_MEM structure from a memory BIO and then free up the BIO: |
| |
| BUF_MEM *bptr; |
| |
| BIO_get_mem_ptr(mem, &bptr); |
| BIO_set_close(mem, BIO_NOCLOSE); /* So BIO_free() leaves BUF_MEM alone */ |
| BIO_free(mem); |
| |
| =head1 RETURN VALUES |
| |
| BIO_s_mem() and BIO_s_secmem() return a valid memory B<BIO_METHOD> structure. |
| |
| BIO_set_mem_eof_return(), BIO_get_mem_data(), BIO_set_mem_buf() and BIO_get_mem_ptr() |
| return 1 on success or a value which is less than or equal to 0 if an error occurred. |
| |
| BIO_new_mem_buf() returns a valid B<BIO> structure on success or NULL on error. |
| |
| =head1 COPYRIGHT |
| |
| Copyright 2000-2018 The OpenSSL Project Authors. All Rights Reserved. |
| |
| Licensed under the OpenSSL license (the "License"). You may not use |
| this file except in compliance with the License. You can obtain a copy |
| in the file LICENSE in the source distribution or at |
| L<https://www.openssl.org/source/license.html>. |
| |
| =cut |