openssl/doc/man3/BIO_meth_new.pod
Rich Salz 6e4618a0d7 Fix L<> entries without sections
Add sections (almost always "(3)" to L<> references that were missing
them. Among other things, this
Fixes: #10226

Also remove two references to non-existant manpages that have never
existed, and with the 3.0 structure, are unlikely to do so.

Reviewed-by: Tomas Mraz <tmraz@fedoraproject.org>
Reviewed-by: Richard Levitte <levitte@openssl.org>
(Merged from https://github.com/openssl/openssl/pull/10240)
2019-10-31 14:26:34 +01:00

165 lines
7.5 KiB
Plaintext

=pod
=head1 NAME
BIO_get_new_index,
BIO_meth_new, BIO_meth_free, BIO_meth_get_read_ex, BIO_meth_set_read_ex,
BIO_meth_get_write_ex, BIO_meth_set_write_ex, BIO_meth_get_write,
BIO_meth_set_write, BIO_meth_get_read, BIO_meth_set_read, BIO_meth_get_puts,
BIO_meth_set_puts, BIO_meth_get_gets, BIO_meth_set_gets, BIO_meth_get_ctrl,
BIO_meth_set_ctrl, BIO_meth_get_create, BIO_meth_set_create,
BIO_meth_get_destroy, BIO_meth_set_destroy, BIO_meth_get_callback_ctrl,
BIO_meth_set_callback_ctrl - Routines to build up BIO methods
=head1 SYNOPSIS
#include <openssl/bio.h>
int BIO_get_new_index(void);
BIO_METHOD *BIO_meth_new(int type, const char *name);
void BIO_meth_free(BIO_METHOD *biom);
int (*BIO_meth_get_write_ex(const BIO_METHOD *biom))(BIO *, const char *, size_t,
size_t *);
int (*BIO_meth_get_write(const BIO_METHOD *biom))(BIO *, const char *, int);
int BIO_meth_set_write_ex(BIO_METHOD *biom,
int (*bwrite)(BIO *, const char *, size_t, size_t *));
int BIO_meth_set_write(BIO_METHOD *biom,
int (*write)(BIO *, const char *, int));
int (*BIO_meth_get_read_ex(const BIO_METHOD *biom))(BIO *, char *, size_t, size_t *);
int (*BIO_meth_get_read(const BIO_METHOD *biom))(BIO *, char *, int);
int BIO_meth_set_read_ex(BIO_METHOD *biom,
int (*bread)(BIO *, char *, size_t, size_t *));
int BIO_meth_set_read(BIO_METHOD *biom, int (*read)(BIO *, char *, int));
int (*BIO_meth_get_puts(const BIO_METHOD *biom))(BIO *, const char *);
int BIO_meth_set_puts(BIO_METHOD *biom, int (*puts)(BIO *, const char *));
int (*BIO_meth_get_gets(const BIO_METHOD *biom))(BIO *, char *, int);
int BIO_meth_set_gets(BIO_METHOD *biom,
int (*gets)(BIO *, char *, int));
long (*BIO_meth_get_ctrl(const BIO_METHOD *biom))(BIO *, int, long, void *);
int BIO_meth_set_ctrl(BIO_METHOD *biom,
long (*ctrl)(BIO *, int, long, void *));
int (*BIO_meth_get_create(const BIO_METHOD *bion))(BIO *);
int BIO_meth_set_create(BIO_METHOD *biom, int (*create)(BIO *));
int (*BIO_meth_get_destroy(const BIO_METHOD *biom))(BIO *);
int BIO_meth_set_destroy(BIO_METHOD *biom, int (*destroy)(BIO *));
long (*BIO_meth_get_callback_ctrl(const BIO_METHOD *biom))(BIO *, int, BIO_info_cb *);
int BIO_meth_set_callback_ctrl(BIO_METHOD *biom,
long (*callback_ctrl)(BIO *, int, BIO_info_cb *));
=head1 DESCRIPTION
The B<BIO_METHOD> type is a structure used for the implementation of new BIO
types. It provides a set of functions used by OpenSSL for the implementation
of the various BIO capabilities. See the L<bio(7)> page for more information.
BIO_meth_new() creates a new B<BIO_METHOD> structure. It should be given a
unique integer B<type> and a string that represents its B<name>.
Use BIO_get_new_index() to get the value for B<type>.
The set of
standard OpenSSL provided BIO types is provided in B<bio.h>. Some examples
include B<BIO_TYPE_BUFFER> and B<BIO_TYPE_CIPHER>. Filter BIOs should have a
type which have the "filter" bit set (B<BIO_TYPE_FILTER>). Source/sink BIOs
should have the "source/sink" bit set (B<BIO_TYPE_SOURCE_SINK>). File descriptor
based BIOs (e.g. socket, fd, connect, accept etc) should additionally have the
"descriptor" bit set (B<BIO_TYPE_DESCRIPTOR>). See the L<BIO_find_type(3)> page for
more information.
BIO_meth_free() destroys a B<BIO_METHOD> structure and frees up any memory
associated with it.
BIO_meth_get_write_ex() and BIO_meth_set_write_ex() get and set the function
used for writing arbitrary length data to the BIO respectively. This function
will be called in response to the application calling BIO_write_ex() or
BIO_write(). The parameters for the function have the same meaning as for
BIO_write_ex(). Older code may call BIO_meth_get_write() and
BIO_meth_set_write() instead. Applications should not call both
BIO_meth_set_write_ex() and BIO_meth_set_write() or call BIO_meth_get_write()
when the function was set with BIO_meth_set_write_ex().
BIO_meth_get_read_ex() and BIO_meth_set_read_ex() get and set the function used
for reading arbitrary length data from the BIO respectively. This function will
be called in response to the application calling BIO_read_ex() or BIO_read().
The parameters for the function have the same meaning as for BIO_read_ex().
Older code may call BIO_meth_get_read() and BIO_meth_set_read() instead.
Applications should not call both BIO_meth_set_read_ex() and BIO_meth_set_read()
or call BIO_meth_get_read() when the function was set with
BIO_meth_set_read_ex().
BIO_meth_get_puts() and BIO_meth_set_puts() get and set the function used for
writing a NULL terminated string to the BIO respectively. This function will be
called in response to the application calling BIO_puts(). The parameters for
the function have the same meaning as for BIO_puts().
BIO_meth_get_gets() and BIO_meth_set_gets() get and set the function typically
used for reading a line of data from the BIO respectively (see the L<BIO_gets(3)>
page for more information). This function will be called in response to the
application calling BIO_gets(). The parameters for the function have the same
meaning as for BIO_gets().
BIO_meth_get_ctrl() and BIO_meth_set_ctrl() get and set the function used for
processing ctrl messages in the BIO respectively. See the L<BIO_ctrl(3)> page for
more information. This function will be called in response to the application
calling BIO_ctrl(). The parameters for the function have the same meaning as for
BIO_ctrl().
BIO_meth_get_create() and BIO_meth_set_create() get and set the function used
for creating a new instance of the BIO respectively. This function will be
called in response to the application calling BIO_new() and passing
in a pointer to the current BIO_METHOD. The BIO_new() function will allocate the
memory for the new BIO, and a pointer to this newly allocated structure will
be passed as a parameter to the function.
BIO_meth_get_destroy() and BIO_meth_set_destroy() get and set the function used
for destroying an instance of a BIO respectively. This function will be
called in response to the application calling BIO_free(). A pointer to the BIO
to be destroyed is passed as a parameter. The destroy function should be used
for BIO specific clean up. The memory for the BIO itself should not be freed by
this function.
BIO_meth_get_callback_ctrl() and BIO_meth_set_callback_ctrl() get and set the
function used for processing callback ctrl messages in the BIO respectively. See
the L<BIO_callback_ctrl(3)> page for more information. This function will be called
in response to the application calling BIO_callback_ctrl(). The parameters for
the function have the same meaning as for BIO_callback_ctrl().
=head1 RETURN VALUES
BIO_get_new_index() returns the new BIO type value or -1 if an error occurred.
BIO_meth_new(int type, const char *name) returns a valid B<BIO_METHOD> or NULL
if an error occurred.
The B<BIO_meth_set> functions return 1 on success or 0 on error.
The B<BIO_meth_get> functions return the corresponding function pointers.
=head1 SEE ALSO
L<bio(7)>, L<BIO_find_type(3)>, L<BIO_ctrl(3)>, L<BIO_read_ex(3)>, L<BIO_new(3)>
=head1 HISTORY
The functions described here were added in OpenSSL 1.1.0.
=head1 COPYRIGHT
Copyright 2016-2018 The OpenSSL Project Authors. All Rights Reserved.
Licensed under the Apache License 2.0 (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