/********************************************************************\ * BitlBee -- An IRC to other IM-networks gateway * * * * Copyright 2002-2004 Wilmer van der Gaast and others * \********************************************************************/ /* SSL module */ /* This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License with the Debian GNU/Linux distribution in /usr/share/common-licenses/GPL; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307 USA */ /* ssl_client makes it easier to open SSL connections to servers. (It doesn't offer SSL server functionality yet, but it could be useful to add it later.) Different ssl_client modules are available, and ssl_client tries to make them all behave the same. It's very simple and basic, it just imitates the proxy_connect() function from the Gaim libs and passes the socket to the program once the handshake is completed. */ #include #include "proxy.h" /* Some generic error codes. Especially SSL_AGAIN is important if you want to do asynchronous I/O. */ #define SSL_OK 0 #define SSL_NOHANDSHAKE 1 #define SSL_AGAIN 2 extern int ssl_errno; /* This is what your callback function should look like. */ typedef gboolean (*ssl_input_function)(gpointer, void*, b_input_condition); /* Perform any global initialization the SSL library might need. */ G_MODULE_EXPORT void ssl_init( void ); /* Connect to host:port, call the given function when the connection is ready to be used for SSL traffic. This is all done asynchronously, no blocking I/O! (Except for the DNS lookups, for now...) */ G_MODULE_EXPORT void *ssl_connect( char *host, int port, ssl_input_function func, gpointer data ); /* Start an SSL session on an existing fd. Useful for STARTTLS functionality, for example in Jabber. */ G_MODULE_EXPORT void *ssl_starttls( int fd, ssl_input_function func, gpointer data ); /* Obviously you need special read/write functions to read data. */ G_MODULE_EXPORT int ssl_read( void *conn, char *buf, int len ); G_MODULE_EXPORT int ssl_write( void *conn, const char *buf, int len ); /* Now needed by most SSL libs. See for more info: http://www.gnu.org/software/gnutls/manual/gnutls.html#index-gnutls_005frecord_005fcheck_005fpending-209 http://www.openssl.org/docs/ssl/SSL_pending.html Required because OpenSSL empties the TCP buffer completely but doesn't necessarily give us all the unencrypted data. Or maybe you didn't ask for all of it because your buffer is too small. Returns 0 if there's nothing left, 1 if there's more data. */ G_MODULE_EXPORT int ssl_pending( void *conn ); /* Abort the SSL connection and disconnect the socket. Do not use close() directly, both the SSL library and the peer will be unhappy! */ G_MODULE_EXPORT void ssl_disconnect( void *conn_ ); /* Get the fd for this connection, you will usually need it for event handling. */ G_MODULE_EXPORT int ssl_getfd( void *conn ); /* This function returns B_EV_IO_READ/WRITE. With SSL connections it's possible that something has to be read while actually were trying to write something (think about key exchange/refresh/etc). So when an SSL operation returned SSL_AGAIN, *always* use this function when adding an event handler to the queue. (And it should perform exactly the same action as the handler that just received the SSL_AGAIN.) */ G_MODULE_EXPORT b_input_condition ssl_getdirection( void *conn ); G_MODULE_EXPORT size_t ssl_des3_encrypt(const unsigned char *key, size_t key_len, const unsigned char *input, size_t input_len, const unsigned char *iv, unsigned char **res);