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7932982b88
Now handle [http[s]://][userinfo@]host[:port][/path][?query][#frag] by optionally providing any userinfo, query, and frag components. All usages of this function, which are client-only, silently ignore userinfo and frag components, while the query component is taken as part of the path. Update and extend the unit tests and all affected documentation. Document and deprecat OCSP_parse_url(). Fixes an issue that came up when discussing FR #14001. Reviewed-by: Richard Levitte <levitte@openssl.org> (Merged from https://github.com/openssl/openssl/pull/14009)
230 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
230 lines
11 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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- 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 *no_proxy,
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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_ct, 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 *no_proxy,
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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_ct,
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const ASN1_ITEM *rsp_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 *no_proxy,
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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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const 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 *no_proxy,
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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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=head1 DESCRIPTION
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OSSL_HTTP_get() uses HTTP GET to obtain data (of any type) from the given I<url>
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and returns it as a memory BIO.
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If the schema component of the I<url> is C<https> a TLS connection is requested
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and the I<bio_update_fn> parameter, described below, must be provided.
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Any userinfo and fragment components in the I<url> are ignored.
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Any query component is handled as part of the path component.
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OSSL_HTTP_get_asn1() is like OSSL_HTTP_get() but in addition
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parses the received contents (e.g., an X.509 certificate)
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as an ASN.1 DER encoded value with the expected structure specified by I<rsp_it>
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and returns it on success as a pointer to I<ASN1_VALUE>.
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OSSL_HTTP_post_asn1() is like OSSL_HTTP_get_asn1() but uses the HTTP POST method
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to send a request I<req> with the ASN.1 structure defined in I<req_it> and the
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given I<content_type> to the given I<server> and optional I<port> and I<path>.
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If I<use_ssl> is nonzero a TLS connection is requested and the I<bio_update_fn>
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parameter, described below, must be provided.
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OSSL_HTTP_transfer() exchanges any form of HTTP request and response.
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It implements the core of the functions described above.
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If I<path> parameter is NULL it defaults to "/".
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If I<use_ssl> is nonzero a TLS connection is requested
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and the I<bio_update_fn> parameter, described below, must be provided.
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If I<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 I<content_type>.
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The optional list I<headers> may contain additional custom HTTP header lines.
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If I<req_mem> is NULL (i.e., the HTTP method is GET) and I<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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Typically the OpenSSL build supports sockets
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and the I<bio> and I<rbio> parameters are both NULL.
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In this case the client creates a network BIO internally
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for connecting to the given I<server>
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at the specified I<port> (if any, defaulting to 80 for HTTP or 443 for HTTPS),
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optionally via a I<proxy> (respecting I<no_proxy>) as described below.
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Then the client uses this internal BIO for exchanging the request and response.
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If I<bio> is given and I<rbio> is NULL then the client uses this I<bio> instead.
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If both I<bio> and I<rbio> are given (which may be memory BIOs for instance)
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then no explicit connection is attempted,
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I<bio> is used for writing the request, and I<rbio> for reading the response.
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As soon as the client has flushed I<bio> the server must be ready to provide
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a response or indicate a waiting condition via I<rbio>.
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The optional I<proxy> parameter can be used to set the address of the an
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HTTP(S) proxy to use (unless overridden by "no_proxy" settings).
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If TLS is not used this defaults to the environment variable C<http_proxy>
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if set, else C<HTTP_PROXY>.
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If I<use_ssl> != 0 it defaults to C<https_proxy> if set, else C<HTTPS_PROXY>.
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An empty proxy string specifies not to use a proxy.
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Else the format is C<[http[s]://]address[:port][/path]>,
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where any path given is ignored.
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The default proxy port number is 80, or 443 in case "https:" is given.
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The HTTP client functions connect via the given proxy unless the I<server>
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is found in the optional list I<no_proxy> of proxy hostnames (if not NULL;
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default is the environment variable C<no_proxy> if set, else C<NO_PROXY>).
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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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The I<maxline> parameter specifies the response header maximum line length,
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where a value <= 0 indicates that the B<HTTP_DEFAULT_MAX_LINE_LENGTH> of 4KiB
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should be used.
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This length is also used as the number of content bytes that are read at a time.
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The I<max_resp_len> parameter specifies the maximum response length,
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where 0 indicates B<HTTP_DEFAULT_MAX_RESP_LEN>, which currently is 100 KiB.
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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 I<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 I<expected_ct>
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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 I<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 I<bio_update_fn> with its optional argument I<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 I<bio> and I<rbio> are given).
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I<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 I<bio> argument,
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whereby it may make use of a custom defined argument I<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_do_connect_retry(),
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the function is invoked with the I<connect> argument being 1 and the I<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 I<connect> is 0 and I<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 HTTPS proxy.
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It promotes the given BIO I<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 I<proxyuser> and I<proxypass>,
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to connect with TLS protection ultimately to I<server> and I<port>.
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If the I<port> argument is NULL or the empty string it defaults to "443".
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The I<timeout> parameter is used as described above.
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Since this function is typically called by applications such as
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L<openssl-s_client(1)> it uses the I<bio_err> and I<prog> parameters (unless
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NULL) to print additional diagnostic information in a user-oriented way.
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=head1 NOTES
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The names of the environment variables used by this implementation:
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C<http_proxy>, C<HTTP_PROXY>, C<https_proxy>, C<HTTPS_PROXY>, C<no_proxy>, and
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C<NO_PROXY>, have been chosen for maximal compatibility with
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other HTTP client implementations such as wget, curl, and git.
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=head1 RETURN VALUES
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On success, OSSL_HTTP_get(), OSSL_HTTP_get_asn1(), OSSL_HTTP_post_asn1(), and
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OSSL_HTTP_transfer() return a memory BIO containing the data received via HTTP.
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This must be freed by the caller. On failure, NULL is returned.
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Failure conditions include connection/transfer timeout, parse errors, etc.
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OSSL_HTTP_proxy_connect() returns 1 on success, 0 on error.
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=head1 SEE ALSO
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L<OSSL_HTTP_parse_url(3)>
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L<BIO_set_conn_port(3)>
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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_transfer(), and OSSL_HTTP_proxy_connect()
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were added in OpenSSL 3.0.
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=head1 COPYRIGHT
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Copyright 2019-2021 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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