openssl/demos/tunala/sm.c
Geoff Thorpe fd69886aed - Network errors could pollute the buffers because -1 isn't noticed in an
"unsigned int".
- Remove redundant processing with machine->ssl is NULL.
- Remove compiler warnings about uninitialised 'ctx' (it's not used
  uninitialised, but gcc can't see that).
2002-01-10 06:03:12 +00:00

152 lines
4.4 KiB
C

#include "tunala.h"
#ifndef NO_TUNALA
void state_machine_init(state_machine_t *machine)
{
machine->ssl = NULL;
machine->bio_intossl = machine->bio_fromssl = NULL;
buffer_init(&machine->clean_in);
buffer_init(&machine->clean_out);
buffer_init(&machine->dirty_in);
buffer_init(&machine->dirty_out);
}
void state_machine_close(state_machine_t *machine)
{
if(machine->ssl)
SSL_free(machine->ssl);
/* SSL_free seems to decrement the reference counts already so doing this goes
* kaboom. */
#if 0
if(machine->bio_intossl)
BIO_free(machine->bio_intossl);
if(machine->bio_fromssl)
BIO_free(machine->bio_fromssl);
#endif
buffer_close(&machine->clean_in);
buffer_close(&machine->clean_out);
buffer_close(&machine->dirty_in);
buffer_close(&machine->dirty_out);
state_machine_init(machine);
}
buffer_t *state_machine_get_buffer(state_machine_t *machine, sm_buffer_t type)
{
switch(type) {
case SM_CLEAN_IN:
return &machine->clean_in;
case SM_CLEAN_OUT:
return &machine->clean_out;
case SM_DIRTY_IN:
return &machine->dirty_in;
case SM_DIRTY_OUT:
return &machine->dirty_out;
default:
break;
}
/* Should never get here */
abort();
return NULL;
}
SSL *state_machine_get_SSL(state_machine_t *machine)
{
return machine->ssl;
}
int state_machine_set_SSL(state_machine_t *machine, SSL *ssl, int is_server)
{
if(machine->ssl)
/* Shouldn't ever be set twice */
abort();
machine->ssl = ssl;
/* Create the BIOs to handle the dirty side of the SSL */
if((machine->bio_intossl = BIO_new(BIO_s_mem())) == NULL)
abort();
if((machine->bio_fromssl = BIO_new(BIO_s_mem())) == NULL)
abort();
/* Hook up the BIOs on the dirty side of the SSL */
SSL_set_bio(machine->ssl, machine->bio_intossl, machine->bio_fromssl);
if(is_server)
SSL_set_accept_state(machine->ssl);
else
SSL_set_connect_state(machine->ssl);
/* If we're the first one to generate traffic - do it now otherwise we
* go into the next select empty-handed and our peer will not send data
* but will similarly wait for us. */
return state_machine_churn(machine);
}
/* Performs the data-IO loop and returns zero if the machine should close */
int state_machine_churn(state_machine_t *machine)
{
unsigned int loop;
if(machine->ssl == NULL) {
if(buffer_empty(&machine->clean_out))
/* Time to close this state-machine altogether */
return 0;
else
/* Still buffered data on the clean side to go out */
return 1;
}
/* Do this loop twice to cover any dependencies about which precise
* order of reads and writes is required. */
for(loop = 0; loop < 2; loop++) {
buffer_to_SSL(&machine->clean_in, machine->ssl);
buffer_to_BIO(&machine->dirty_in, machine->bio_intossl);
buffer_from_SSL(&machine->clean_out, machine->ssl);
buffer_from_BIO(&machine->dirty_out, machine->bio_fromssl);
}
/* We close on the SSL side if the info callback noticed some problems
* or an SSL shutdown was underway and shutdown traffic had all been
* sent. */
if(SSL_get_app_data(machine->ssl) || (SSL_get_shutdown(machine->ssl) &&
buffer_empty(&machine->dirty_out))) {
/* Great, we can seal off the dirty side completely */
if(!state_machine_close_dirty(machine))
return 0;
}
/* Either the SSL is alive and well, or the closing process still has
* outgoing data waiting to be sent */
return 1;
}
/* Called when the clean side of the SSL has lost its connection */
int state_machine_close_clean(state_machine_t *machine)
{
/* Well, first thing to do is null out the clean-side buffers - they're
* no use any more. */
buffer_close(&machine->clean_in);
buffer_close(&machine->clean_out);
/* And start an SSL shutdown */
if(machine->ssl)
SSL_shutdown(machine->ssl);
/* This is an "event", so flush the SSL of any generated traffic */
state_machine_churn(machine);
if(buffer_empty(&machine->dirty_in) &&
buffer_empty(&machine->dirty_out))
return 0;
return 1;
}
/* Called when the dirty side of the SSL has lost its connection. This is pretty
* terminal as all that can be left to do is send any buffered output on the
* clean side - after that, we're done. */
int state_machine_close_dirty(state_machine_t *machine)
{
buffer_close(&machine->dirty_in);
buffer_close(&machine->dirty_out);
buffer_close(&machine->clean_in);
if(machine->ssl)
SSL_free(machine->ssl);
machine->ssl = NULL;
machine->bio_intossl = machine->bio_fromssl = NULL;
if(buffer_empty(&machine->clean_out))
return 0;
return 1;
}
#endif /* !defined(NO_TUNALA) */