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The new client has become an independent libcrpyto module in crypto/http/ and * can handle any types of requests and responses (ASN.1-encoded and plain) * does not include potentially busy loops when waiting for responses but * makes use of a new timeout mechanism integrated with socket-based BIO * supports the use of HTTP proxies and TLS, including HTTPS over proxies * supports HTTP redirection via codes 301 and 302 for GET requests * returns more useful diagnostics in various error situations Also adapts - and strongly simplifies - hitherto uses of HTTP in crypto/ocsp/, crypto/x509/x_all.c, apps/lib/apps.c, and apps/{ocsp,s_client,s_server}.c Reviewed-by: Matt Caswell <matt@openssl.org> Reviewed-by: David von Oheimb <david.von.oheimb@siemens.com> (Merged from https://github.com/openssl/openssl/pull/10667)
211 lines
10 KiB
Plaintext
211 lines
10 KiB
Plaintext
=pod
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=head1 NAME
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OSSL_HTTP_get,
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OSSL_HTTP_get_asn1,
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OSSL_HTTP_post_asn1,
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OSSL_HTTP_transfer,
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OSSL_HTTP_bio_cb_t,
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OSSL_HTTP_proxy_connect,
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OSSL_HTTP_parse_url
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- http client functions
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=head1 SYNOPSIS
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#include <openssl/http.h>
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typedef BIO *(*OSSL_HTTP_bio_cb_t)(BIO *bio, void *arg,
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int connect, int detail);
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BIO *OSSL_HTTP_get(const char *url, const char *proxy, const char *proxy_port,
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BIO *bio, BIO *rbio,
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OSSL_HTTP_bio_cb_t bio_update_fn, void *arg,
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const STACK_OF(CONF_VALUE) *headers,
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int maxline, unsigned long max_resp_len, int timeout,
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const char *expected_content_type, int expect_asn1);
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ASN1_VALUE *OSSL_HTTP_get_asn1(const char *url,
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const char *proxy, const char *proxy_port,
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BIO *bio, BIO *rbio,
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OSSL_HTTP_bio_cb_t bio_update_fn, void *arg,
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const STACK_OF(CONF_VALUE) *headers,
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int maxline, unsigned long max_resp_len,
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int timeout, const char *expected_content_type,
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const ASN1_ITEM *it);
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ASN1_VALUE *OSSL_HTTP_post_asn1(const char *server, const char *port,
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const char *path, int use_ssl,
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const char *proxy, const char *proxy_port,
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BIO *bio, BIO *rbio,
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OSSL_HTTP_bio_cb_t bio_update_fn, void *arg,
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const STACK_OF(CONF_VALUE) *headers,
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const char *content_type,
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ASN1_VALUE *req, const ASN1_ITEM *req_it,
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int maxline, unsigned long max_resp_len,
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int timeout, const char *expected_ct,
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const ASN1_ITEM *rsp_it);
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BIO *OSSL_HTTP_transfer(const char *server, const char *port, const char *path,
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int use_ssl, const char *proxy, const char *proxy_port,
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BIO *bio, BIO *rbio,
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OSSL_HTTP_bio_cb_t bio_update_fn, void *arg,
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const STACK_OF(CONF_VALUE) *headers,
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const char *content_type, BIO *req_mem,
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int maxline, unsigned long max_resp_len, int timeout,
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const char *expected_ct, int expect_asn1,
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char **redirection_url);
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int OSSL_HTTP_proxy_connect(BIO *bio, const char *server, const char *port,
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const char *proxyuser, const char *proxypass,
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int timeout, BIO *bio_err, const char *prog);
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int OSSL_HTTP_parse_url(const char *url, char **phost, char **pport,
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char **ppath, int *pssl);
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=head1 DESCRIPTION
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OSSL_HTTP_get() uses HTTP GET to obtain data (of any type) from the given B<url>
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and returns it as a memory BIO.
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OSSL_HTTP_get_asn1() uses HTTP GET to obtain an ASN.1-encoded value
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(e.g., an X.509 certificate) with the expected structure specified by B<it>
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(e.g., I<ASN1_ITEM_rptr(X509)>) from the given B<url>
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and returns it on success as a pointer to I<ASN1_VALUE>.
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OSSL_HTTP_post_asn1() uses the HTTP POST method to send a request B<req>
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with the ASN.1 structure defined in B<req_it> and the given B<content_type> to
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the given B<server> and optional B<port> and B<path>, which defaults to "/".
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If B<use_ssl> is nonzero a TLS connection is requested and the B<bio_update_fn>
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parameter, described below, must be provided.
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The optional list B<headers> may contain additional custom HTTP header lines.
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The expected structure of the response is specified by B<rsp_it>.
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On success it returns the response as a pointer to B<ASN1_VALUE>.
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OSSL_HTTP_transfer() exchanges an HTTP request and response with
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the given B<server> and optional B<port> and B<path>, which defaults to "/".
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If B<use_ssl> is nonzero a TLS connection is requested and the B<bio_update_fn>
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parameter, described below, must be provided.
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If B<req_mem> is NULL it uses the HTTP GET method, else it uses HTTP POST to
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send a request with the contents of the memory BIO and optional B<content_type>.
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The optional list B<headers> may contain additional custom HTTP header lines.
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If B<req_mem> is NULL (i.e., the HTTP method is GET) and B<redirection_url>
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is not NULL the latter pointer is used to provide any new location that
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the server may return with HTTP code 301 (MOVED_PERMANENTLY) or 302 (FOUND).
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In this case the caller is responsible for deallocating this URL with
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L<OPENSSL_free(3)>.
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The above functions have the following parameters in common.
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If the B<proxy> parameter is not NULL the HTTP client functions connect
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via the given proxy and the optionally given B<proxy_port>.
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Proxying plain HTTP is supported directly,
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while using a proxy for HTTPS connections requires a suitable callback function
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such as OSSL_HTTP_proxy_connect(), described below.
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Typically the B<bio> and B<rbio> parameters are NULL and the client creates a
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network BIO internally for connecting to the given server and port (optionally
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via a proxy and its port), and uses it for exchanging the request and response.
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If B<bio> is given and B<rbio> is NULL then the client uses this BIO instead.
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If both B<bio> and B<rbio> are given (which may be memory BIOs for instance)
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then no explicit connection is attempted,
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B<bio> is used for writing the request, and B<rbio> for reading the response.
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As soon as the client has flushed B<bio> the server must be ready to provide
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a response or indicate a waiting condition via B<rbio>.
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The B<maxline> parameter specifies the response header maximum line length,
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where 0 indicates the default value, which currently is 4k.
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The B<max_resp_len> parameter specifies the maximum response length,
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where 0 indicates the default value, which currently is 100k.
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An ASN.1-encoded response is expected by OSSL_HTTP_get_asn1() and
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OSSL_HTTP_post_asn1(), while for OSSL_HTTP_get() or OSSL_HTTP_transfer()
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this is only the case if the B<expect_asn1> parameter is nonzero.
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If the response header contains one or more Content-Length header lines and/or
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an ASN.1-encoded response is expected, which should include a total length,
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the length indications received are checked for consistency
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and for not exceeding the maximum response length.
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If the parameter B<expected_content_type> (or B<expected_ct>, respectively)
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is not NULL then the HTTP client checks that the given content type string
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is included in the HTTP header of the response and returns an error if not.
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If the B<timeout> parameter is > 0 this indicates the maximum number of seconds
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to wait until the transfer is complete.
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A value of 0 enables waiting indefinitely,
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while a value < 0 immediately leads to a timeout condition.
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The optional parameter B<bio_update_fn> with its optional argument B<arg> may
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be used to modify the connection BIO used by the HTTP client (and cannot be
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used when both B<bio> and B<rbio> are given).
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B<bio_update_fn> is a BIO connect/disconnect callback function with prototype
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BIO *(*OSSL_HTTP_bio_cb_t)(BIO *bio, void *arg, int connect, int detail)
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The callback may modify the HTTP BIO provided in the B<bio> argument,
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whereby it may make use of a custom defined argument B<arg>,
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which may for instance refer to an I<SSL_CTX> structure.
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During connection establishment, just after calling BIO_connect_retry(),
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the function is invoked with the B<connect> argument being 1 and the B<detail>
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argument being 1 if HTTPS is requested, i.e., SSL/TLS should be enabled.
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On disconnect B<connect> is 0 and B<detail> is 1 if no error occurred, else 0.
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For instance, on connect the function may prepend a TLS BIO to implement HTTPS;
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after disconnect it may do some diagnostic output and/or specific cleanup.
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The function should return NULL to indicate failure.
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Here is a simple example that supports TLS connections (but not via a proxy):
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BIO *http_tls_cb(BIO *hbio, void *arg, int connect, int detail)
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{
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SSL_CTX *ctx = (SSL_CTX *)arg;
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if (connect && detail) { /* connecting with TLS */
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BIO *sbio = BIO_new_ssl(ctx, 1);
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hbio = sbio != NULL ? BIO_push(sbio, hbio) : NULL;
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} else if (!connect && !detail) { /* disconnecting after error */
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/* optionally add diagnostics here */
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}
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return hbio;
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}
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After disconnect the modified BIO will be deallocated using BIO_free_all().
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OSSL_HTTP_proxy_connect() may be used by an above BIO connect callback function
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to set up an SSL/TLS connection via an HTTP proxy.
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It promotes the given BIO B<bio> representing a connection
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pre-established with a TLS proxy using the HTTP CONNECT method,
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optionally using proxy client credentials B<proxyuser> and B<proxypass>,
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to connect with TLS protection ultimately to B<server> and B<port>.
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The B<timeout> parameter is used as described above.
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Since this function is typically called by appplications such as
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L<openssl-s_client(1)> it uses the B<bio_err> and B<prog> parameters (unless
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NULL) to print additional diagnostic information in a user-oriented way.
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OSSL_HTTP_parse_url() parses its input string B<url> as a URL and splits it up
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into host, port and path components and a flag whether it begins with 'https'.
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The host component may be a DNS name or an IPv4 or an IPv6 address.
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The port component is optional and defaults to "443" for HTTPS, else "80".
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The path component is also optional and defaults to "/".
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As far as the result pointer arguments are not NULL it assigns via
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them copies of the respective string components.
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The strings returned this way must be deallocated by the caller using
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L<OPENSSL_free(3)> unless they are NULL, which is their default value on error.
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=head1 RETURN VALUES
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OSSL_HTTP_get(), OSSL_HTTP_get_asn1(), OSSL_HTTP_post_asn1(), and
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OSSL_HTTP_transfer() return on success the data received via HTTP, else NULL.
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Error conditions include connection/transfer timeout, parse errors, etc.
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OSSL_HTTP_proxy_connect() and OSSL_HTTP_parse_url()
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return 1 on success, 0 on error.
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=head1 HISTORY
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OSSL_HTTP_get(), OSSL_HTTP_get_asn1(), OSSL_HTTP_post_asn1(),
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OSSL_HTTP_proxy_connect(), and OSSL_HTTP_parse_url() were added in OpenSSL 3.0.
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=head1 COPYRIGHT
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Copyright 2019-2020 The OpenSSL Project Authors. All Rights Reserved.
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Licensed under the Apache License 2.0 (the "License"). You may not use
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this file except in compliance with the License. You can obtain a copy
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in the file LICENSE in the source distribution or at
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L<https://www.openssl.org/source/license.html>.
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=cut
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