1 | /*
|
---|
2 | * Copyright 2023 The OpenSSL Project Authors. All Rights Reserved.
|
---|
3 | *
|
---|
4 | * Licensed under the Apache License 2.0 (the "License"). You may not use
|
---|
5 | * this file except in compliance with the License. You can obtain a copy
|
---|
6 | * in the file LICENSE in the source distribution or at
|
---|
7 | * https://www.openssl.org/source/license.html
|
---|
8 | */
|
---|
9 |
|
---|
10 | /*
|
---|
11 | * NB: Changes to this file should also be reflected in
|
---|
12 | * doc/man7/ossl-guide-quic-client-non-block.pod
|
---|
13 | */
|
---|
14 |
|
---|
15 | #include <string.h>
|
---|
16 |
|
---|
17 | /* Include the appropriate header file for SOCK_DGRAM */
|
---|
18 | #ifdef _WIN32 /* Windows */
|
---|
19 | # include <winsock2.h>
|
---|
20 | #else /* Linux/Unix */
|
---|
21 | # include <sys/socket.h>
|
---|
22 | # include <sys/select.h>
|
---|
23 | #endif
|
---|
24 |
|
---|
25 | #include <openssl/bio.h>
|
---|
26 | #include <openssl/ssl.h>
|
---|
27 | #include <openssl/err.h>
|
---|
28 |
|
---|
29 | /* Helper function to create a BIO connected to the server */
|
---|
30 | static BIO *create_socket_bio(const char *hostname, const char *port,
|
---|
31 | int family, BIO_ADDR **peer_addr)
|
---|
32 | {
|
---|
33 | int sock = -1;
|
---|
34 | BIO_ADDRINFO *res;
|
---|
35 | const BIO_ADDRINFO *ai = NULL;
|
---|
36 | BIO *bio;
|
---|
37 |
|
---|
38 | /*
|
---|
39 | * Lookup IP address info for the server.
|
---|
40 | */
|
---|
41 | if (!BIO_lookup_ex(hostname, port, BIO_LOOKUP_CLIENT, family, SOCK_DGRAM, 0,
|
---|
42 | &res))
|
---|
43 | return NULL;
|
---|
44 |
|
---|
45 | /*
|
---|
46 | * Loop through all the possible addresses for the server and find one
|
---|
47 | * we can connect to.
|
---|
48 | */
|
---|
49 | for (ai = res; ai != NULL; ai = BIO_ADDRINFO_next(ai)) {
|
---|
50 | /*
|
---|
51 | * Create a UDP socket. We could equally use non-OpenSSL calls such
|
---|
52 | * as "socket" here for this and the subsequent connect and close
|
---|
53 | * functions. But for portability reasons and also so that we get
|
---|
54 | * errors on the OpenSSL stack in the event of a failure we use
|
---|
55 | * OpenSSL's versions of these functions.
|
---|
56 | */
|
---|
57 | sock = BIO_socket(BIO_ADDRINFO_family(ai), SOCK_DGRAM, 0, 0);
|
---|
58 | if (sock == -1)
|
---|
59 | continue;
|
---|
60 |
|
---|
61 | /* Connect the socket to the server's address */
|
---|
62 | if (!BIO_connect(sock, BIO_ADDRINFO_address(ai), 0)) {
|
---|
63 | BIO_closesocket(sock);
|
---|
64 | sock = -1;
|
---|
65 | continue;
|
---|
66 | }
|
---|
67 |
|
---|
68 | /* Set to nonblocking mode */
|
---|
69 | if (!BIO_socket_nbio(sock, 1)) {
|
---|
70 | BIO_closesocket(sock);
|
---|
71 | sock = -1;
|
---|
72 | continue;
|
---|
73 | }
|
---|
74 |
|
---|
75 | break;
|
---|
76 | }
|
---|
77 |
|
---|
78 | if (sock != -1) {
|
---|
79 | *peer_addr = BIO_ADDR_dup(BIO_ADDRINFO_address(ai));
|
---|
80 | if (*peer_addr == NULL) {
|
---|
81 | BIO_closesocket(sock);
|
---|
82 | return NULL;
|
---|
83 | }
|
---|
84 | }
|
---|
85 |
|
---|
86 | /* Free the address information resources we allocated earlier */
|
---|
87 | BIO_ADDRINFO_free(res);
|
---|
88 |
|
---|
89 | /* If sock is -1 then we've been unable to connect to the server */
|
---|
90 | if (sock == -1)
|
---|
91 | return NULL;
|
---|
92 |
|
---|
93 | /* Create a BIO to wrap the socket */
|
---|
94 | bio = BIO_new(BIO_s_datagram());
|
---|
95 | if (bio == NULL) {
|
---|
96 | BIO_closesocket(sock);
|
---|
97 | return NULL;
|
---|
98 | }
|
---|
99 |
|
---|
100 | /*
|
---|
101 | * Associate the newly created BIO with the underlying socket. By
|
---|
102 | * passing BIO_CLOSE here the socket will be automatically closed when
|
---|
103 | * the BIO is freed. Alternatively you can use BIO_NOCLOSE, in which
|
---|
104 | * case you must close the socket explicitly when it is no longer
|
---|
105 | * needed.
|
---|
106 | */
|
---|
107 | BIO_set_fd(bio, sock, BIO_CLOSE);
|
---|
108 |
|
---|
109 | return bio;
|
---|
110 | }
|
---|
111 |
|
---|
112 | static void wait_for_activity(SSL *ssl)
|
---|
113 | {
|
---|
114 | fd_set wfds, rfds;
|
---|
115 | int width, sock, isinfinite;
|
---|
116 | struct timeval tv;
|
---|
117 | struct timeval *tvp = NULL;
|
---|
118 |
|
---|
119 | /* Get hold of the underlying file descriptor for the socket */
|
---|
120 | sock = SSL_get_fd(ssl);
|
---|
121 |
|
---|
122 | FD_ZERO(&wfds);
|
---|
123 | FD_ZERO(&rfds);
|
---|
124 |
|
---|
125 | /*
|
---|
126 | * Find out if we would like to write to the socket, or read from it (or
|
---|
127 | * both)
|
---|
128 | */
|
---|
129 | if (SSL_net_write_desired(ssl))
|
---|
130 | FD_SET(sock, &wfds);
|
---|
131 | if (SSL_net_read_desired(ssl))
|
---|
132 | FD_SET(sock, &rfds);
|
---|
133 | width = sock + 1;
|
---|
134 |
|
---|
135 | /*
|
---|
136 | * Find out when OpenSSL would next like to be called, regardless of
|
---|
137 | * whether the state of the underlying socket has changed or not.
|
---|
138 | */
|
---|
139 | if (SSL_get_event_timeout(ssl, &tv, &isinfinite) && !isinfinite)
|
---|
140 | tvp = &tv;
|
---|
141 |
|
---|
142 | /*
|
---|
143 | * Wait until the socket is writeable or readable. We use select here
|
---|
144 | * for the sake of simplicity and portability, but you could equally use
|
---|
145 | * poll/epoll or similar functions
|
---|
146 | *
|
---|
147 | * NOTE: For the purposes of this demonstration code this effectively
|
---|
148 | * makes this demo block until it has something more useful to do. In a
|
---|
149 | * real application you probably want to go and do other work here (e.g.
|
---|
150 | * update a GUI, or service other connections).
|
---|
151 | *
|
---|
152 | * Let's say for example that you want to update the progress counter on
|
---|
153 | * a GUI every 100ms. One way to do that would be to use the timeout in
|
---|
154 | * the last parameter to "select" below. If the tvp value is greater
|
---|
155 | * than 100ms then use 100ms instead. Then, when select returns, you
|
---|
156 | * check if it did so because of activity on the file descriptors or
|
---|
157 | * because of the timeout. If the 100ms GUI timeout has expired but the
|
---|
158 | * tvp timeout has not then go and update the GUI and then restart the
|
---|
159 | * "select" (with updated timeouts).
|
---|
160 | */
|
---|
161 |
|
---|
162 | select(width, &rfds, &wfds, NULL, tvp);
|
---|
163 | }
|
---|
164 |
|
---|
165 | static int handle_io_failure(SSL *ssl, int res)
|
---|
166 | {
|
---|
167 | switch (SSL_get_error(ssl, res)) {
|
---|
168 | case SSL_ERROR_WANT_READ:
|
---|
169 | case SSL_ERROR_WANT_WRITE:
|
---|
170 | /* Temporary failure. Wait until we can read/write and try again */
|
---|
171 | wait_for_activity(ssl);
|
---|
172 | return 1;
|
---|
173 |
|
---|
174 | case SSL_ERROR_ZERO_RETURN:
|
---|
175 | /* EOF */
|
---|
176 | return 0;
|
---|
177 |
|
---|
178 | case SSL_ERROR_SYSCALL:
|
---|
179 | return -1;
|
---|
180 |
|
---|
181 | case SSL_ERROR_SSL:
|
---|
182 | /*
|
---|
183 | * Some stream fatal error occurred. This could be because of a
|
---|
184 | * stream reset - or some failure occurred on the underlying
|
---|
185 | * connection.
|
---|
186 | */
|
---|
187 | switch (SSL_get_stream_read_state(ssl)) {
|
---|
188 | case SSL_STREAM_STATE_RESET_REMOTE:
|
---|
189 | printf("Stream reset occurred\n");
|
---|
190 | /*
|
---|
191 | * The stream has been reset but the connection is still
|
---|
192 | * healthy.
|
---|
193 | */
|
---|
194 | break;
|
---|
195 |
|
---|
196 | case SSL_STREAM_STATE_CONN_CLOSED:
|
---|
197 | printf("Connection closed\n");
|
---|
198 | /* Connection is already closed. */
|
---|
199 | break;
|
---|
200 |
|
---|
201 | default:
|
---|
202 | printf("Unknown stream failure\n");
|
---|
203 | break;
|
---|
204 | }
|
---|
205 | /*
|
---|
206 | * If the failure is due to a verification error we can get more
|
---|
207 | * information about it from SSL_get_verify_result().
|
---|
208 | */
|
---|
209 | if (SSL_get_verify_result(ssl) != X509_V_OK)
|
---|
210 | printf("Verify error: %s\n",
|
---|
211 | X509_verify_cert_error_string(SSL_get_verify_result(ssl)));
|
---|
212 | return -1;
|
---|
213 |
|
---|
214 | default:
|
---|
215 | return -1;
|
---|
216 | }
|
---|
217 | }
|
---|
218 | /*
|
---|
219 | * Simple application to send a basic HTTP/1.0 request to a server and
|
---|
220 | * print the response on the screen. Note that HTTP/1.0 over QUIC is
|
---|
221 | * non-standard and will not typically be supported by real world servers. This
|
---|
222 | * is for demonstration purposes only.
|
---|
223 | */
|
---|
224 | int main(int argc, char *argv[])
|
---|
225 | {
|
---|
226 | SSL_CTX *ctx = NULL;
|
---|
227 | SSL *ssl = NULL;
|
---|
228 | BIO *bio = NULL;
|
---|
229 | int res = EXIT_FAILURE;
|
---|
230 | int ret;
|
---|
231 | unsigned char alpn[] = { 8, 'h', 't', 't', 'p', '/', '1', '.', '0' };
|
---|
232 | const char *request_start = "GET / HTTP/1.0\r\nConnection: close\r\nHost: ";
|
---|
233 | const char *request_end = "\r\n\r\n";
|
---|
234 | size_t written, readbytes;
|
---|
235 | char buf[160];
|
---|
236 | BIO_ADDR *peer_addr = NULL;
|
---|
237 | int eof = 0;
|
---|
238 | char *hostname, *port;
|
---|
239 | int ipv6 = 0;
|
---|
240 | int argnext = 1;
|
---|
241 |
|
---|
242 | if (argc < 3) {
|
---|
243 | printf("Usage: quic-client-non-block [-6] hostname port\n");
|
---|
244 | goto end;
|
---|
245 | }
|
---|
246 |
|
---|
247 | if (!strcmp(argv[argnext], "-6")) {
|
---|
248 | if (argc < 4) {
|
---|
249 | printf("Usage: quic-client-non-block [-6] hostname port\n");
|
---|
250 | goto end;
|
---|
251 | }
|
---|
252 | ipv6 = 1;
|
---|
253 | argnext++;
|
---|
254 | }
|
---|
255 | hostname = argv[argnext++];
|
---|
256 | port = argv[argnext];
|
---|
257 |
|
---|
258 | /*
|
---|
259 | * Create an SSL_CTX which we can use to create SSL objects from. We
|
---|
260 | * want an SSL_CTX for creating clients so we use
|
---|
261 | * OSSL_QUIC_client_method() here.
|
---|
262 | */
|
---|
263 | ctx = SSL_CTX_new(OSSL_QUIC_client_method());
|
---|
264 | if (ctx == NULL) {
|
---|
265 | printf("Failed to create the SSL_CTX\n");
|
---|
266 | goto end;
|
---|
267 | }
|
---|
268 |
|
---|
269 | /*
|
---|
270 | * Configure the client to abort the handshake if certificate
|
---|
271 | * verification fails. Virtually all clients should do this unless you
|
---|
272 | * really know what you are doing.
|
---|
273 | */
|
---|
274 | SSL_CTX_set_verify(ctx, SSL_VERIFY_PEER, NULL);
|
---|
275 |
|
---|
276 | /* Use the default trusted certificate store */
|
---|
277 | if (!SSL_CTX_set_default_verify_paths(ctx)) {
|
---|
278 | printf("Failed to set the default trusted certificate store\n");
|
---|
279 | goto end;
|
---|
280 | }
|
---|
281 |
|
---|
282 | /* Create an SSL object to represent the TLS connection */
|
---|
283 | ssl = SSL_new(ctx);
|
---|
284 | if (ssl == NULL) {
|
---|
285 | printf("Failed to create the SSL object\n");
|
---|
286 | goto end;
|
---|
287 | }
|
---|
288 |
|
---|
289 | /*
|
---|
290 | * Create the underlying transport socket/BIO and associate it with the
|
---|
291 | * connection.
|
---|
292 | */
|
---|
293 | bio = create_socket_bio(hostname, port, ipv6 ? AF_INET6 : AF_INET,
|
---|
294 | &peer_addr);
|
---|
295 | if (bio == NULL) {
|
---|
296 | printf("Failed to crete the BIO\n");
|
---|
297 | goto end;
|
---|
298 | }
|
---|
299 | SSL_set_bio(ssl, bio, bio);
|
---|
300 |
|
---|
301 | /*
|
---|
302 | * Tell the server during the handshake which hostname we are attempting
|
---|
303 | * to connect to in case the server supports multiple hosts.
|
---|
304 | */
|
---|
305 | if (!SSL_set_tlsext_host_name(ssl, hostname)) {
|
---|
306 | printf("Failed to set the SNI hostname\n");
|
---|
307 | goto end;
|
---|
308 | }
|
---|
309 |
|
---|
310 | /*
|
---|
311 | * Ensure we check during certificate verification that the server has
|
---|
312 | * supplied a certificate for the hostname that we were expecting.
|
---|
313 | * Virtually all clients should do this unless you really know what you
|
---|
314 | * are doing.
|
---|
315 | */
|
---|
316 | if (!SSL_set1_host(ssl, hostname)) {
|
---|
317 | printf("Failed to set the certificate verification hostname");
|
---|
318 | goto end;
|
---|
319 | }
|
---|
320 |
|
---|
321 | /* SSL_set_alpn_protos returns 0 for success! */
|
---|
322 | if (SSL_set_alpn_protos(ssl, alpn, sizeof(alpn)) != 0) {
|
---|
323 | printf("Failed to set the ALPN for the connection\n");
|
---|
324 | goto end;
|
---|
325 | }
|
---|
326 |
|
---|
327 | /* Set the IP address of the remote peer */
|
---|
328 | if (!SSL_set1_initial_peer_addr(ssl, peer_addr)) {
|
---|
329 | printf("Failed to set the initial peer address\n");
|
---|
330 | goto end;
|
---|
331 | }
|
---|
332 |
|
---|
333 | /*
|
---|
334 | * The underlying socket is always nonblocking with QUIC, but the default
|
---|
335 | * behaviour of the SSL object is still to block. We set it for nonblocking
|
---|
336 | * mode in this demo.
|
---|
337 | */
|
---|
338 | if (!SSL_set_blocking_mode(ssl, 0)) {
|
---|
339 | printf("Failed to turn off blocking mode\n");
|
---|
340 | goto end;
|
---|
341 | }
|
---|
342 |
|
---|
343 | /* Do the handshake with the server */
|
---|
344 | while ((ret = SSL_connect(ssl)) != 1) {
|
---|
345 | if (handle_io_failure(ssl, ret) == 1)
|
---|
346 | continue; /* Retry */
|
---|
347 | printf("Failed to connect to server\n");
|
---|
348 | goto end; /* Cannot retry: error */
|
---|
349 | }
|
---|
350 |
|
---|
351 | /* Write an HTTP GET request to the peer */
|
---|
352 | while (!SSL_write_ex(ssl, request_start, strlen(request_start), &written)) {
|
---|
353 | if (handle_io_failure(ssl, 0) == 1)
|
---|
354 | continue; /* Retry */
|
---|
355 | printf("Failed to write start of HTTP request\n");
|
---|
356 | goto end; /* Cannot retry: error */
|
---|
357 | }
|
---|
358 | while (!SSL_write_ex(ssl, hostname, strlen(hostname), &written)) {
|
---|
359 | if (handle_io_failure(ssl, 0) == 1)
|
---|
360 | continue; /* Retry */
|
---|
361 | printf("Failed to write hostname in HTTP request\n");
|
---|
362 | goto end; /* Cannot retry: error */
|
---|
363 | }
|
---|
364 | while (!SSL_write_ex(ssl, request_end, strlen(request_end), &written)) {
|
---|
365 | if (handle_io_failure(ssl, 0) == 1)
|
---|
366 | continue; /* Retry */
|
---|
367 | printf("Failed to write end of HTTP request\n");
|
---|
368 | goto end; /* Cannot retry: error */
|
---|
369 | }
|
---|
370 |
|
---|
371 | do {
|
---|
372 | /*
|
---|
373 | * Get up to sizeof(buf) bytes of the response. We keep reading until
|
---|
374 | * the server closes the connection.
|
---|
375 | */
|
---|
376 | while (!eof && !SSL_read_ex(ssl, buf, sizeof(buf), &readbytes)) {
|
---|
377 | switch (handle_io_failure(ssl, 0)) {
|
---|
378 | case 1:
|
---|
379 | continue; /* Retry */
|
---|
380 | case 0:
|
---|
381 | eof = 1;
|
---|
382 | continue;
|
---|
383 | case -1:
|
---|
384 | default:
|
---|
385 | printf("Failed reading remaining data\n");
|
---|
386 | goto end; /* Cannot retry: error */
|
---|
387 | }
|
---|
388 | }
|
---|
389 | /*
|
---|
390 | * OpenSSL does not guarantee that the returned data is a string or
|
---|
391 | * that it is NUL terminated so we use fwrite() to write the exact
|
---|
392 | * number of bytes that we read. The data could be non-printable or
|
---|
393 | * have NUL characters in the middle of it. For this simple example
|
---|
394 | * we're going to print it to stdout anyway.
|
---|
395 | */
|
---|
396 | if (!eof)
|
---|
397 | fwrite(buf, 1, readbytes, stdout);
|
---|
398 | } while (!eof);
|
---|
399 | /* In case the response didn't finish with a newline we add one now */
|
---|
400 | printf("\n");
|
---|
401 |
|
---|
402 | /*
|
---|
403 | * Repeatedly call SSL_shutdown() until the connection is fully
|
---|
404 | * closed.
|
---|
405 | */
|
---|
406 | while ((ret = SSL_shutdown(ssl)) != 1) {
|
---|
407 | if (ret < 0 && handle_io_failure(ssl, ret) == 1)
|
---|
408 | continue; /* Retry */
|
---|
409 | }
|
---|
410 |
|
---|
411 | /* Success! */
|
---|
412 | res = EXIT_SUCCESS;
|
---|
413 | end:
|
---|
414 | /*
|
---|
415 | * If something bad happened then we will dump the contents of the
|
---|
416 | * OpenSSL error stack to stderr. There might be some useful diagnostic
|
---|
417 | * information there.
|
---|
418 | */
|
---|
419 | if (res == EXIT_FAILURE)
|
---|
420 | ERR_print_errors_fp(stderr);
|
---|
421 |
|
---|
422 | /*
|
---|
423 | * Free the resources we allocated. We do not free the BIO object here
|
---|
424 | * because ownership of it was immediately transferred to the SSL object
|
---|
425 | * via SSL_set_bio(). The BIO will be freed when we free the SSL object.
|
---|
426 | */
|
---|
427 | SSL_free(ssl);
|
---|
428 | SSL_CTX_free(ctx);
|
---|
429 | BIO_ADDR_free(peer_addr);
|
---|
430 | return res;
|
---|
431 | }
|
---|