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Revision 1.20 by elmex, Sat May 24 08:16:50 2008 UTC vs.
Revision 1.198 by root, Tue Aug 31 01:03:37 2010 UTC

1package AnyEvent::Handle;
2
3no warnings;
4use strict;
5
6use AnyEvent ();
7use AnyEvent::Util ();
8use Scalar::Util ();
9use Carp ();
10use Fcntl ();
11use Errno qw/EAGAIN EINTR/;
12
13=head1 NAME 1=head1 NAME
14 2
15AnyEvent::Handle - non-blocking I/O on filehandles via AnyEvent 3AnyEvent::Handle - non-blocking I/O on streaming handles via AnyEvent
16
17This module is experimental.
18
19=cut
20
21our $VERSION = '0.04';
22 4
23=head1 SYNOPSIS 5=head1 SYNOPSIS
24 6
25 use AnyEvent; 7 use AnyEvent;
26 use AnyEvent::Handle; 8 use AnyEvent::Handle;
27 9
28 my $cv = AnyEvent->condvar; 10 my $cv = AnyEvent->condvar;
29 11
30 my $ae_fh = AnyEvent::Handle->new (fh => \*STDIN); 12 my $hdl; $hdl = new AnyEvent::Handle
31
32 #TODO
33
34 # or use the constructor to pass the callback:
35
36 my $ae_fh2 =
37 AnyEvent::Handle->new (
38 fh => \*STDIN, 13 fh => \*STDIN,
39 on_eof => sub { 14 on_error => sub {
40 $cv->broadcast; 15 my ($hdl, $fatal, $msg) = @_;
41 }, 16 warn "got error $msg\n";
42 #TODO 17 $hdl->destroy;
18 $cv->send;
43 ); 19 };
44 20
45 $cv->wait; 21 # send some request line
22 $hdl->push_write ("getinfo\015\012");
23
24 # read the response line
25 $hdl->push_read (line => sub {
26 my ($hdl, $line) = @_;
27 warn "got line <$line>\n";
28 $cv->send;
29 });
30
31 $cv->recv;
46 32
47=head1 DESCRIPTION 33=head1 DESCRIPTION
48 34
49This module is a helper module to make it easier to do event-based I/O on 35This is a helper module to make it easier to do event-based I/O on
50filehandles. For utility functions for doing non-blocking connects and accepts 36stream-based filehandles (sockets, pipes, and other stream things).
51on sockets see L<AnyEvent::Util>.
52 37
38The L<AnyEvent::Intro> tutorial contains some well-documented
39AnyEvent::Handle examples.
40
53In the following, when the documentation refers to of "bytes" then this 41In the following, where the documentation refers to "bytes", it means
54means characters. As sysread and syswrite are used for all I/O, their 42characters. As sysread and syswrite are used for all I/O, their
55treatment of characters applies to this module as well. 43treatment of characters applies to this module as well.
44
45At the very minimum, you should specify C<fh> or C<connect>, and the
46C<on_error> callback.
56 47
57All callbacks will be invoked with the handle object as their first 48All callbacks will be invoked with the handle object as their first
58argument. 49argument.
59 50
51=cut
52
53package AnyEvent::Handle;
54
55use Scalar::Util ();
56use List::Util ();
57use Carp ();
58use Errno qw(EAGAIN EINTR);
59
60use AnyEvent (); BEGIN { AnyEvent::common_sense }
61use AnyEvent::Util qw(WSAEWOULDBLOCK);
62
63our $VERSION = $AnyEvent::VERSION;
64
65sub _load_func($) {
66 my $func = $_[0];
67
68 unless (defined &$func) {
69 my $pkg = $func;
70 do {
71 $pkg =~ s/::[^:]+$//
72 or return;
73 eval "require $pkg";
74 } until defined &$func;
75 }
76
77 \&$func
78}
79
60=head1 METHODS 80=head1 METHODS
61 81
62=over 4 82=over 4
63 83
64=item B<new (%args)> 84=item $handle = B<new> AnyEvent::Handle fh => $filehandle, key => value...
65 85
66The constructor supports these arguments (all as key => value pairs). 86The constructor supports these arguments (all as C<< key => value >> pairs).
67 87
68=over 4 88=over 4
69 89
70=item fh => $filehandle [MANDATORY] 90=item fh => $filehandle [C<fh> or C<connect> MANDATORY]
71 91
72The filehandle this L<AnyEvent::Handle> object will operate on. 92The filehandle this L<AnyEvent::Handle> object will operate on.
73
74NOTE: The filehandle will be set to non-blocking (using 93NOTE: The filehandle will be set to non-blocking mode (using
75AnyEvent::Util::fh_nonblocking). 94C<AnyEvent::Util::fh_nonblocking>) by the constructor and needs to stay in
95that mode.
76 96
77=item on_eof => $cb->($self) 97=item connect => [$host, $service] [C<fh> or C<connect> MANDATORY]
78 98
79Set the callback to be called on EOF. 99Try to connect to the specified host and service (port), using
100C<AnyEvent::Socket::tcp_connect>. The C<$host> additionally becomes the
101default C<peername>.
80 102
81While not mandatory, it is highly recommended to set an eof callback, 103You have to specify either this parameter, or C<fh>, above.
82otherwise you might end up with a closed socket while you are still
83waiting for data.
84 104
105It is possible to push requests on the read and write queues, and modify
106properties of the stream, even while AnyEvent::Handle is connecting.
107
108When this parameter is specified, then the C<on_prepare>,
109C<on_connect_error> and C<on_connect> callbacks will be called under the
110appropriate circumstances:
111
112=over 4
113
85=item on_error => $cb->($self) 114=item on_prepare => $cb->($handle)
86 115
116This (rarely used) callback is called before a new connection is
117attempted, but after the file handle has been created. It could be used to
118prepare the file handle with parameters required for the actual connect
119(as opposed to settings that can be changed when the connection is already
120established).
121
122The return value of this callback should be the connect timeout value in
123seconds (or C<0>, or C<undef>, or the empty list, to indicate that the
124default timeout is to be used).
125
126=item on_connect => $cb->($handle, $host, $port, $retry->())
127
128This callback is called when a connection has been successfully established.
129
130The peer's numeric host and port (the socket peername) are passed as
131parameters, together with a retry callback.
132
133If, for some reason, the handle is not acceptable, calling C<$retry>
134will continue with the next connection target (in case of multi-homed
135hosts or SRV records there can be multiple connection endpoints). At the
136time it is called the read and write queues, eof status, tls status and
137similar properties of the handle will have been reset.
138
139In most cases, you should ignore the C<$retry> parameter.
140
141=item on_connect_error => $cb->($handle, $message)
142
143This callback is called when the connection could not be
144established. C<$!> will contain the relevant error code, and C<$message> a
145message describing it (usually the same as C<"$!">).
146
147If this callback isn't specified, then C<on_error> will be called with a
148fatal error instead.
149
150=back
151
152=item on_error => $cb->($handle, $fatal, $message)
153
87This is the fatal error callback, that is called when, well, a fatal error 154This is the error callback, which is called when, well, some error
88occurs, such as not being able to resolve the hostname, failure to connect 155occured, such as not being able to resolve the hostname, failure to
89or a read error. 156connect, or a read error.
90 157
91The object will not be in a usable state when this callback has been 158Some errors are fatal (which is indicated by C<$fatal> being true). On
92called. 159fatal errors the handle object will be destroyed (by a call to C<< ->
160destroy >>) after invoking the error callback (which means you are free to
161examine the handle object). Examples of fatal errors are an EOF condition
162with active (but unsatisifable) read watchers (C<EPIPE>) or I/O errors. In
163cases where the other side can close the connection at will, it is
164often easiest to not report C<EPIPE> errors in this callback.
93 165
166AnyEvent::Handle tries to find an appropriate error code for you to check
167against, but in some cases (TLS errors), this does not work well. It is
168recommended to always output the C<$message> argument in human-readable
169error messages (it's usually the same as C<"$!">).
170
171Non-fatal errors can be retried by returning, but it is recommended
172to simply ignore this parameter and instead abondon the handle object
173when this callback is invoked. Examples of non-fatal errors are timeouts
174C<ETIMEDOUT>) or badly-formatted data (C<EBADMSG>).
175
94On callback entrance, the value of C<$!> contains the operating system 176On entry to the callback, the value of C<$!> contains the operating
95error (or C<ENOSPC> or C<EPIPE>). 177system error code (or C<ENOSPC>, C<EPIPE>, C<ETIMEDOUT>, C<EBADMSG> or
178C<EPROTO>).
96 179
97While not mandatory, it is I<highly> recommended to set this callback, as 180While not mandatory, it is I<highly> recommended to set this callback, as
98you will not be notified of errors otherwise. The default simply calls 181you will not be notified of errors otherwise. The default just calls
99die. 182C<croak>.
100 183
101=item on_read => $cb->($self) 184=item on_read => $cb->($handle)
102 185
103This sets the default read callback, which is called when data arrives 186This sets the default read callback, which is called when data arrives
104and no read request is in the queue. 187and no read request is in the queue (unlike read queue callbacks, this
188callback will only be called when at least one octet of data is in the
189read buffer).
105 190
106To access (and remove data from) the read buffer, use the C<< ->rbuf >> 191To access (and remove data from) the read buffer, use the C<< ->rbuf >>
107method or access the C<$self->{rbuf}> member directly. 192method or access the C<< $handle->{rbuf} >> member directly. Note that you
193must not enlarge or modify the read buffer, you can only remove data at
194the beginning from it.
108 195
196You can also call C<< ->push_read (...) >> or any other function that
197modifies the read queue. Or do both. Or ...
198
109When an EOF condition is detected then AnyEvent::Handle will first try to 199When an EOF condition is detected, AnyEvent::Handle will first try to
110feed all the remaining data to the queued callbacks and C<on_read> before 200feed all the remaining data to the queued callbacks and C<on_read> before
111calling the C<on_eof> callback. If no progress can be made, then a fatal 201calling the C<on_eof> callback. If no progress can be made, then a fatal
112error will be raised (with C<$!> set to C<EPIPE>). 202error will be raised (with C<$!> set to C<EPIPE>).
113 203
204Note that, unlike requests in the read queue, an C<on_read> callback
205doesn't mean you I<require> some data: if there is an EOF and there
206are outstanding read requests then an error will be flagged. With an
207C<on_read> callback, the C<on_eof> callback will be invoked.
208
209=item on_eof => $cb->($handle)
210
211Set the callback to be called when an end-of-file condition is detected,
212i.e. in the case of a socket, when the other side has closed the
213connection cleanly, and there are no outstanding read requests in the
214queue (if there are read requests, then an EOF counts as an unexpected
215connection close and will be flagged as an error).
216
217For sockets, this just means that the other side has stopped sending data,
218you can still try to write data, and, in fact, one can return from the EOF
219callback and continue writing data, as only the read part has been shut
220down.
221
222If an EOF condition has been detected but no C<on_eof> callback has been
223set, then a fatal error will be raised with C<$!> set to <0>.
224
114=item on_drain => $cb->() 225=item on_drain => $cb->($handle)
115 226
116This sets the callback that is called when the write buffer becomes empty 227This sets the callback that is called when the write buffer becomes empty
117(or when the callback is set and the buffer is empty already). 228(or immediately if the buffer is empty already).
118 229
119To append to the write buffer, use the C<< ->push_write >> method. 230To append to the write buffer, use the C<< ->push_write >> method.
231
232This callback is useful when you don't want to put all of your write data
233into the queue at once, for example, when you want to write the contents
234of some file to the socket you might not want to read the whole file into
235memory and push it into the queue, but instead only read more data from
236the file when the write queue becomes empty.
237
238=item timeout => $fractional_seconds
239
240=item rtimeout => $fractional_seconds
241
242=item wtimeout => $fractional_seconds
243
244If non-zero, then these enables an "inactivity" timeout: whenever this
245many seconds pass without a successful read or write on the underlying
246file handle (or a call to C<timeout_reset>), the C<on_timeout> callback
247will be invoked (and if that one is missing, a non-fatal C<ETIMEDOUT>
248error will be raised).
249
250There are three variants of the timeouts that work independently
251of each other, for both read and write, just read, and just write:
252C<timeout>, C<rtimeout> and C<wtimeout>, with corresponding callbacks
253C<on_timeout>, C<on_rtimeout> and C<on_wtimeout>, and reset functions
254C<timeout_reset>, C<rtimeout_reset>, and C<wtimeout_reset>.
255
256Note that timeout processing is active even when you do not have
257any outstanding read or write requests: If you plan to keep the connection
258idle then you should disable the timeout temporarily or ignore the timeout
259in the C<on_timeout> callback, in which case AnyEvent::Handle will simply
260restart the timeout.
261
262Zero (the default) disables this timeout.
263
264=item on_timeout => $cb->($handle)
265
266Called whenever the inactivity timeout passes. If you return from this
267callback, then the timeout will be reset as if some activity had happened,
268so this condition is not fatal in any way.
120 269
121=item rbuf_max => <bytes> 270=item rbuf_max => <bytes>
122 271
123If defined, then a fatal error will be raised (with C<$!> set to C<ENOSPC>) 272If defined, then a fatal error will be raised (with C<$!> set to C<ENOSPC>)
124when the read buffer ever (strictly) exceeds this size. This is useful to 273when the read buffer ever (strictly) exceeds this size. This is useful to
125avoid denial-of-service attacks. 274avoid some forms of denial-of-service attacks.
126 275
127For example, a server accepting connections from untrusted sources should 276For example, a server accepting connections from untrusted sources should
128be configured to accept only so-and-so much data that it cannot act on 277be configured to accept only so-and-so much data that it cannot act on
129(for example, when expecting a line, an attacker could send an unlimited 278(for example, when expecting a line, an attacker could send an unlimited
130amount of data without a callback ever being called as long as the line 279amount of data without a callback ever being called as long as the line
131isn't finished). 280isn't finished).
132 281
282=item autocork => <boolean>
283
284When disabled (the default), C<push_write> will try to immediately
285write the data to the handle if possible. This avoids having to register
286a write watcher and wait for the next event loop iteration, but can
287be inefficient if you write multiple small chunks (on the wire, this
288disadvantage is usually avoided by your kernel's nagle algorithm, see
289C<no_delay>, but this option can save costly syscalls).
290
291When enabled, writes will always be queued till the next event loop
292iteration. This is efficient when you do many small writes per iteration,
293but less efficient when you do a single write only per iteration (or when
294the write buffer often is full). It also increases write latency.
295
296=item no_delay => <boolean>
297
298When doing small writes on sockets, your operating system kernel might
299wait a bit for more data before actually sending it out. This is called
300the Nagle algorithm, and usually it is beneficial.
301
302In some situations you want as low a delay as possible, which can be
303accomplishd by setting this option to a true value.
304
305The default is your operating system's default behaviour (most likely
306enabled). This option explicitly enables or disables it, if possible.
307
308=item keepalive => <boolean>
309
310Enables (default disable) the SO_KEEPALIVE option on the stream socket:
311normally, TCP connections have no time-out once established, so TCP
312connections, once established, can stay alive forever even when the other
313side has long gone. TCP keepalives are a cheap way to take down long-lived
314TCP connections when the other side becomes unreachable. While the default
315is OS-dependent, TCP keepalives usually kick in after around two hours,
316and, if the other side doesn't reply, take down the TCP connection some 10
317to 15 minutes later.
318
319It is harmless to specify this option for file handles that do not support
320keepalives, and enabling it on connections that are potentially long-lived
321is usually a good idea.
322
323=item oobinline => <boolean>
324
325BSD majorly fucked up the implementation of TCP urgent data. The result
326is that almost no OS implements TCP according to the specs, and every OS
327implements it slightly differently.
328
329If you want to handle TCP urgent data, then setting this flag (the default
330is enabled) gives you the most portable way of getting urgent data, by
331putting it into the stream.
332
333Since BSD emulation of OOB data on top of TCP's urgent data can have
334security implications, AnyEvent::Handle sets this flag automatically
335unless explicitly specified. Note that setting this flag after
336establishing a connection I<may> be a bit too late (data loss could
337already have occured on BSD systems), but at least it will protect you
338from most attacks.
339
133=item read_size => <bytes> 340=item read_size => <bytes>
134 341
135The default read block size (the amount of bytes this module will try to read 342The default read block size (the number of bytes this module will
136on each [loop iteration). Default: C<4096>. 343try to read during each loop iteration, which affects memory
344requirements). Default: C<8192>.
137 345
138=item low_water_mark => <bytes> 346=item low_water_mark => <bytes>
139 347
140Sets the amount of bytes (default: C<0>) that make up an "empty" write 348Sets the number of bytes (default: C<0>) that make up an "empty" write
141buffer: If the write reaches this size or gets even samller it is 349buffer: If the buffer reaches this size or gets even samller it is
142considered empty. 350considered empty.
143 351
352Sometimes it can be beneficial (for performance reasons) to add data to
353the write buffer before it is fully drained, but this is a rare case, as
354the operating system kernel usually buffers data as well, so the default
355is good in almost all cases.
356
357=item linger => <seconds>
358
359If this is non-zero (default: C<3600>), the destructor of the
360AnyEvent::Handle object will check whether there is still outstanding
361write data and will install a watcher that will write this data to the
362socket. No errors will be reported (this mostly matches how the operating
363system treats outstanding data at socket close time).
364
365This will not work for partial TLS data that could not be encoded
366yet. This data will be lost. Calling the C<stoptls> method in time might
367help.
368
369=item peername => $string
370
371A string used to identify the remote site - usually the DNS hostname
372(I<not> IDN!) used to create the connection, rarely the IP address.
373
374Apart from being useful in error messages, this string is also used in TLS
375peername verification (see C<verify_peername> in L<AnyEvent::TLS>). This
376verification will be skipped when C<peername> is not specified or is
377C<undef>.
378
144=item tls => "accept" | "connect" | Net::SSLeay::SSL object 379=item tls => "accept" | "connect" | Net::SSLeay::SSL object
145 380
146When this parameter is given, it enables TLS (SSL) mode, that means it 381When this parameter is given, it enables TLS (SSL) mode, that means
147will start making tls handshake and will transparently encrypt/decrypt 382AnyEvent will start a TLS handshake as soon as the connection has been
148data. 383established and will transparently encrypt/decrypt data afterwards.
149 384
150For the TLS server side, use C<accept>, and for the TLS client side of a 385All TLS protocol errors will be signalled as C<EPROTO>, with an
151connection, use C<connect> mode. 386appropriate error message.
387
388TLS mode requires Net::SSLeay to be installed (it will be loaded
389automatically when you try to create a TLS handle): this module doesn't
390have a dependency on that module, so if your module requires it, you have
391to add the dependency yourself.
392
393Unlike TCP, TLS has a server and client side: for the TLS server side, use
394C<accept>, and for the TLS client side of a connection, use C<connect>
395mode.
152 396
153You can also provide your own TLS connection object, but you have 397You can also provide your own TLS connection object, but you have
154to make sure that you call either C<Net::SSLeay::set_connect_state> 398to make sure that you call either C<Net::SSLeay::set_connect_state>
155or C<Net::SSLeay::set_accept_state> on it before you pass it to 399or C<Net::SSLeay::set_accept_state> on it before you pass it to
156AnyEvent::Handle. 400AnyEvent::Handle. Also, this module will take ownership of this connection
401object.
157 402
158=item tls_ctx => $ssl_ctx 403At some future point, AnyEvent::Handle might switch to another TLS
404implementation, then the option to use your own session object will go
405away.
159 406
407B<IMPORTANT:> since Net::SSLeay "objects" are really only integers,
408passing in the wrong integer will lead to certain crash. This most often
409happens when one uses a stylish C<< tls => 1 >> and is surprised about the
410segmentation fault.
411
412Use the C<< ->starttls >> method if you need to start TLS negotiation later.
413
414=item tls_ctx => $anyevent_tls
415
160Use the given Net::SSLeay::CTX object to create the new TLS connection 416Use the given C<AnyEvent::TLS> object to create the new TLS connection
161(unless a connection object was specified directly). If this parameter is 417(unless a connection object was specified directly). If this parameter is
162missing, then AnyEvent::Handle will use C<AnyEvent::Handle::TLS_CTX>. 418missing, then AnyEvent::Handle will use C<AnyEvent::Handle::TLS_CTX>.
163 419
420Instead of an object, you can also specify a hash reference with C<< key
421=> value >> pairs. Those will be passed to L<AnyEvent::TLS> to create a
422new TLS context object.
423
424=item on_starttls => $cb->($handle, $success[, $error_message])
425
426This callback will be invoked when the TLS/SSL handshake has finished. If
427C<$success> is true, then the TLS handshake succeeded, otherwise it failed
428(C<on_stoptls> will not be called in this case).
429
430The session in C<< $handle->{tls} >> can still be examined in this
431callback, even when the handshake was not successful.
432
433TLS handshake failures will not cause C<on_error> to be invoked when this
434callback is in effect, instead, the error message will be passed to C<on_starttls>.
435
436Without this callback, handshake failures lead to C<on_error> being
437called as usual.
438
439Note that you cannot just call C<starttls> again in this callback. If you
440need to do that, start an zero-second timer instead whose callback can
441then call C<< ->starttls >> again.
442
443=item on_stoptls => $cb->($handle)
444
445When a SSLv3/TLS shutdown/close notify/EOF is detected and this callback is
446set, then it will be invoked after freeing the TLS session. If it is not,
447then a TLS shutdown condition will be treated like a normal EOF condition
448on the handle.
449
450The session in C<< $handle->{tls} >> can still be examined in this
451callback.
452
453This callback will only be called on TLS shutdowns, not when the
454underlying handle signals EOF.
455
456=item json => JSON or JSON::XS object
457
458This is the json coder object used by the C<json> read and write types.
459
460If you don't supply it, then AnyEvent::Handle will create and use a
461suitable one (on demand), which will write and expect UTF-8 encoded JSON
462texts.
463
464Note that you are responsible to depend on the JSON module if you want to
465use this functionality, as AnyEvent does not have a dependency itself.
466
164=back 467=back
165 468
166=cut 469=cut
167 470
168sub new { 471sub new {
169 my $class = shift; 472 my $class = shift;
170
171 my $self = bless { @_ }, $class; 473 my $self = bless { @_ }, $class;
172 474
173 $self->{fh} or Carp::croak "mandatory argument fh is missing"; 475 if ($self->{fh}) {
476 $self->_start;
477 return unless $self->{fh}; # could be gone by now
478
479 } elsif ($self->{connect}) {
480 require AnyEvent::Socket;
481
482 $self->{peername} = $self->{connect}[0]
483 unless exists $self->{peername};
484
485 $self->{_skip_drain_rbuf} = 1;
486
487 {
488 Scalar::Util::weaken (my $self = $self);
489
490 $self->{_connect} =
491 AnyEvent::Socket::tcp_connect (
492 $self->{connect}[0],
493 $self->{connect}[1],
494 sub {
495 my ($fh, $host, $port, $retry) = @_;
496
497 if ($fh) {
498 $self->{fh} = $fh;
499
500 delete $self->{_skip_drain_rbuf};
501 $self->_start;
502
503 $self->{on_connect}
504 and $self->{on_connect}($self, $host, $port, sub {
505 delete @$self{qw(fh _tw _rtw _wtw _ww _rw _eof _queue rbuf _wbuf tls _tls_rbuf _tls_wbuf)};
506 $self->{_skip_drain_rbuf} = 1;
507 &$retry;
508 });
509
510 } else {
511 if ($self->{on_connect_error}) {
512 $self->{on_connect_error}($self, "$!");
513 $self->destroy;
514 } else {
515 $self->_error ($!, 1);
516 }
517 }
518 },
519 sub {
520 local $self->{fh} = $_[0];
521
522 $self->{on_prepare}
523 ? $self->{on_prepare}->($self)
524 : ()
525 }
526 );
527 }
528
529 } else {
530 Carp::croak "AnyEvent::Handle: either an existing fh or the connect parameter must be specified";
531 }
532
533 $self
534}
535
536sub _start {
537 my ($self) = @_;
538
539 # too many clueless people try to use udp and similar sockets
540 # with AnyEvent::Handle, do them a favour.
541 my $type = getsockopt $self->{fh}, Socket::SOL_SOCKET (), Socket::SO_TYPE ();
542 Carp::croak "AnyEvent::Handle: only stream sockets supported, anything else will NOT work!"
543 if Socket::SOCK_STREAM () != (unpack "I", $type) && defined $type;
174 544
175 AnyEvent::Util::fh_nonblocking $self->{fh}, 1; 545 AnyEvent::Util::fh_nonblocking $self->{fh}, 1;
176 546
177 if ($self->{tls}) { 547 $self->{_activity} =
178 require Net::SSLeay; 548 $self->{_ractivity} =
549 $self->{_wactivity} = AE::now;
550
551 $self->timeout (delete $self->{timeout} ) if $self->{timeout};
552 $self->rtimeout (delete $self->{rtimeout} ) if $self->{rtimeout};
553 $self->wtimeout (delete $self->{wtimeout} ) if $self->{wtimeout};
554
555 $self->no_delay (delete $self->{no_delay} ) if exists $self->{no_delay} && $self->{no_delay};
556 $self->keepalive (delete $self->{keepalive}) if exists $self->{keepalive} && $self->{keepalive};
557
558 $self->oobinline (exists $self->{oobinline} ? delete $self->{oobinline} : 1);
559
179 $self->starttls (delete $self->{tls}, delete $self->{tls_ctx}); 560 $self->starttls (delete $self->{tls}, delete $self->{tls_ctx})
180 } 561 if $self->{tls};
181 562
182 $self->on_eof (delete $self->{on_eof} ) if $self->{on_eof};
183 $self->on_error (delete $self->{on_error}) if $self->{on_error};
184 $self->on_drain (delete $self->{on_drain}) if $self->{on_drain}; 563 $self->on_drain (delete $self->{on_drain}) if $self->{on_drain};
185 $self->on_read (delete $self->{on_read} ) if $self->{on_read};
186 564
187 $self->start_read; 565 $self->start_read
566 if $self->{on_read} || @{ $self->{_queue} };
188 567
189 $self 568 $self->_drain_wbuf;
190} 569}
191 570
192sub _shutdown {
193 my ($self) = @_;
194
195 delete $self->{rw};
196 delete $self->{ww};
197 delete $self->{fh};
198}
199
200sub error { 571sub _error {
201 my ($self) = @_; 572 my ($self, $errno, $fatal, $message) = @_;
202 573
203 { 574 $! = $errno;
204 local $!; 575 $message ||= "$!";
205 $self->_shutdown;
206 }
207 576
208 if ($self->{on_error}) { 577 if ($self->{on_error}) {
209 $self->{on_error}($self); 578 $self->{on_error}($self, $fatal, $message);
210 } else { 579 $self->destroy if $fatal;
580 } elsif ($self->{fh} || $self->{connect}) {
581 $self->destroy;
211 die "AnyEvent::Handle uncaught fatal error: $!"; 582 Carp::croak "AnyEvent::Handle uncaught error: $message";
212 } 583 }
213} 584}
214 585
215=item $fh = $handle->fh 586=item $fh = $handle->fh
216 587
217This method returns the filehandle of the L<AnyEvent::Handle> object. 588This method returns the file handle used to create the L<AnyEvent::Handle> object.
218 589
219=cut 590=cut
220 591
221sub fh { $_[0]->{fh} } 592sub fh { $_[0]{fh} }
222 593
223=item $handle->on_error ($cb) 594=item $handle->on_error ($cb)
224 595
225Replace the current C<on_error> callback (see the C<on_error> constructor argument). 596Replace the current C<on_error> callback (see the C<on_error> constructor argument).
226 597
238 609
239sub on_eof { 610sub on_eof {
240 $_[0]{on_eof} = $_[1]; 611 $_[0]{on_eof} = $_[1];
241} 612}
242 613
614=item $handle->on_timeout ($cb)
615
616=item $handle->on_rtimeout ($cb)
617
618=item $handle->on_wtimeout ($cb)
619
620Replace the current C<on_timeout>, C<on_rtimeout> or C<on_wtimeout>
621callback, or disables the callback (but not the timeout) if C<$cb> =
622C<undef>. See the C<timeout> constructor argument and method.
623
624=cut
625
626# see below
627
628=item $handle->autocork ($boolean)
629
630Enables or disables the current autocork behaviour (see C<autocork>
631constructor argument). Changes will only take effect on the next write.
632
633=cut
634
635sub autocork {
636 $_[0]{autocork} = $_[1];
637}
638
639=item $handle->no_delay ($boolean)
640
641Enables or disables the C<no_delay> setting (see constructor argument of
642the same name for details).
643
644=cut
645
646sub no_delay {
647 $_[0]{no_delay} = $_[1];
648
649 eval {
650 local $SIG{__DIE__};
651 setsockopt $_[0]{fh}, Socket::IPPROTO_TCP (), Socket::TCP_NODELAY (), int $_[1]
652 if $_[0]{fh};
653 };
654}
655
656=item $handle->keepalive ($boolean)
657
658Enables or disables the C<keepalive> setting (see constructor argument of
659the same name for details).
660
661=cut
662
663sub keepalive {
664 $_[0]{keepalive} = $_[1];
665
666 eval {
667 local $SIG{__DIE__};
668 setsockopt $_[0]{fh}, Socket::SOL_SOCKET (), Socket::SO_KEEPALIVE (), int $_[1]
669 if $_[0]{fh};
670 };
671}
672
673=item $handle->oobinline ($boolean)
674
675Enables or disables the C<oobinline> setting (see constructor argument of
676the same name for details).
677
678=cut
679
680sub oobinline {
681 $_[0]{oobinline} = $_[1];
682
683 eval {
684 local $SIG{__DIE__};
685 setsockopt $_[0]{fh}, Socket::SOL_SOCKET (), Socket::SO_OOBINLINE (), int $_[1]
686 if $_[0]{fh};
687 };
688}
689
690=item $handle->keepalive ($boolean)
691
692Enables or disables the C<keepalive> setting (see constructor argument of
693the same name for details).
694
695=cut
696
697sub keepalive {
698 $_[0]{keepalive} = $_[1];
699
700 eval {
701 local $SIG{__DIE__};
702 setsockopt $_[0]{fh}, Socket::SOL_SOCKET (), Socket::SO_KEEPALIVE (), int $_[1]
703 if $_[0]{fh};
704 };
705}
706
707=item $handle->on_starttls ($cb)
708
709Replace the current C<on_starttls> callback (see the C<on_starttls> constructor argument).
710
711=cut
712
713sub on_starttls {
714 $_[0]{on_starttls} = $_[1];
715}
716
717=item $handle->on_stoptls ($cb)
718
719Replace the current C<on_stoptls> callback (see the C<on_stoptls> constructor argument).
720
721=cut
722
723sub on_stoptls {
724 $_[0]{on_stoptls} = $_[1];
725}
726
727=item $handle->rbuf_max ($max_octets)
728
729Configures the C<rbuf_max> setting (C<undef> disables it).
730
731=cut
732
733sub rbuf_max {
734 $_[0]{rbuf_max} = $_[1];
735}
736
737#############################################################################
738
739=item $handle->timeout ($seconds)
740
741=item $handle->rtimeout ($seconds)
742
743=item $handle->wtimeout ($seconds)
744
745Configures (or disables) the inactivity timeout.
746
747=item $handle->timeout_reset
748
749=item $handle->rtimeout_reset
750
751=item $handle->wtimeout_reset
752
753Reset the activity timeout, as if data was received or sent.
754
755These methods are cheap to call.
756
757=cut
758
759for my $dir ("", "r", "w") {
760 my $timeout = "${dir}timeout";
761 my $tw = "_${dir}tw";
762 my $on_timeout = "on_${dir}timeout";
763 my $activity = "_${dir}activity";
764 my $cb;
765
766 *$on_timeout = sub {
767 $_[0]{$on_timeout} = $_[1];
768 };
769
770 *$timeout = sub {
771 my ($self, $new_value) = @_;
772
773 $self->{$timeout} = $new_value;
774 delete $self->{$tw}; &$cb;
775 };
776
777 *{"${dir}timeout_reset"} = sub {
778 $_[0]{$activity} = AE::now;
779 };
780
781 # main workhorse:
782 # reset the timeout watcher, as neccessary
783 # also check for time-outs
784 $cb = sub {
785 my ($self) = @_;
786
787 if ($self->{$timeout} && $self->{fh}) {
788 my $NOW = AE::now;
789
790 # when would the timeout trigger?
791 my $after = $self->{$activity} + $self->{$timeout} - $NOW;
792
793 # now or in the past already?
794 if ($after <= 0) {
795 $self->{$activity} = $NOW;
796
797 if ($self->{$on_timeout}) {
798 $self->{$on_timeout}($self);
799 } else {
800 $self->_error (Errno::ETIMEDOUT);
801 }
802
803 # callback could have changed timeout value, optimise
804 return unless $self->{$timeout};
805
806 # calculate new after
807 $after = $self->{$timeout};
808 }
809
810 Scalar::Util::weaken $self;
811 return unless $self; # ->error could have destroyed $self
812
813 $self->{$tw} ||= AE::timer $after, 0, sub {
814 delete $self->{$tw};
815 $cb->($self);
816 };
817 } else {
818 delete $self->{$tw};
819 }
820 }
821}
822
243############################################################################# 823#############################################################################
244 824
245=back 825=back
246 826
247=head2 WRITE QUEUE 827=head2 WRITE QUEUE
260=item $handle->on_drain ($cb) 840=item $handle->on_drain ($cb)
261 841
262Sets the C<on_drain> callback or clears it (see the description of 842Sets the C<on_drain> callback or clears it (see the description of
263C<on_drain> in the constructor). 843C<on_drain> in the constructor).
264 844
845This method may invoke callbacks (and therefore the handle might be
846destroyed after it returns).
847
265=cut 848=cut
266 849
267sub on_drain { 850sub on_drain {
268 my ($self, $cb) = @_; 851 my ($self, $cb) = @_;
269 852
270 $self->{on_drain} = $cb; 853 $self->{on_drain} = $cb;
271 854
272 $cb->($self) 855 $cb->($self)
273 if $cb && $self->{low_water_mark} >= length $self->{wbuf}; 856 if $cb && $self->{low_water_mark} >= (length $self->{wbuf}) + (length $self->{_tls_wbuf});
274} 857}
275 858
276=item $handle->push_write ($data) 859=item $handle->push_write ($data)
277 860
278Queues the given scalar to be written. You can push as much data as you 861Queues the given scalar to be written. You can push as much data as you
279want (only limited by the available memory), as C<AnyEvent::Handle> 862want (only limited by the available memory), as C<AnyEvent::Handle>
280buffers it independently of the kernel. 863buffers it independently of the kernel.
281 864
865This method may invoke callbacks (and therefore the handle might be
866destroyed after it returns).
867
282=cut 868=cut
283 869
284sub _drain_wbuf { 870sub _drain_wbuf {
285 my ($self) = @_; 871 my ($self) = @_;
286 872
287 unless ($self->{ww}) { 873 if (!$self->{_ww} && length $self->{wbuf}) {
874
288 Scalar::Util::weaken $self; 875 Scalar::Util::weaken $self;
876
289 my $cb = sub { 877 my $cb = sub {
290 my $len = syswrite $self->{fh}, $self->{wbuf}; 878 my $len = syswrite $self->{fh}, $self->{wbuf};
291 879
292 if ($len > 0) { 880 if (defined $len) {
293 substr $self->{wbuf}, 0, $len, ""; 881 substr $self->{wbuf}, 0, $len, "";
294 882
883 $self->{_activity} = $self->{_wactivity} = AE::now;
884
295 $self->{on_drain}($self) 885 $self->{on_drain}($self)
296 if $self->{low_water_mark} >= length $self->{wbuf} 886 if $self->{low_water_mark} >= (length $self->{wbuf}) + (length $self->{_tls_wbuf})
297 && $self->{on_drain}; 887 && $self->{on_drain};
298 888
299 delete $self->{ww} unless length $self->{wbuf}; 889 delete $self->{_ww} unless length $self->{wbuf};
300 } elsif ($! != EAGAIN && $! != EINTR) { 890 } elsif ($! != EAGAIN && $! != EINTR && $! != WSAEWOULDBLOCK) {
301 $self->error; 891 $self->_error ($!, 1);
302 } 892 }
303 }; 893 };
304 894
305 $self->{ww} = AnyEvent->io (fh => $self->{fh}, poll => "w", cb => $cb); 895 # try to write data immediately
896 $cb->() unless $self->{autocork};
306 897
307 $cb->($self); 898 # if still data left in wbuf, we need to poll
899 $self->{_ww} = AE::io $self->{fh}, 1, $cb
900 if length $self->{wbuf};
308 }; 901 };
902}
903
904our %WH;
905
906# deprecated
907sub register_write_type($$) {
908 $WH{$_[0]} = $_[1];
309} 909}
310 910
311sub push_write { 911sub push_write {
312 my $self = shift; 912 my $self = shift;
313 913
914 if (@_ > 1) {
915 my $type = shift;
916
917 @_ = ($WH{$type} ||= _load_func "$type\::anyevent_write_type"
918 or Carp::croak "unsupported/unloadable type '$type' passed to AnyEvent::Handle::push_write")
919 ->($self, @_);
920 }
921
922 # we downgrade here to avoid hard-to-track-down bugs,
923 # and diagnose the problem earlier and better.
924
314 if ($self->{filter_w}) { 925 if ($self->{tls}) {
315 $self->{filter_w}->($self, \$_[0]); 926 utf8::downgrade $self->{_tls_wbuf} .= $_[0];
927 &_dotls ($self) if $self->{fh};
316 } else { 928 } else {
317 $self->{wbuf} .= $_[0]; 929 utf8::downgrade $self->{wbuf} .= $_[0];
318 $self->_drain_wbuf; 930 $self->_drain_wbuf if $self->{fh};
319 } 931 }
320} 932}
933
934=item $handle->push_write (type => @args)
935
936Instead of formatting your data yourself, you can also let this module
937do the job by specifying a type and type-specific arguments. You
938can also specify the (fully qualified) name of a package, in which
939case AnyEvent tries to load the package and then expects to find the
940C<anyevent_write_type> function inside (see "custom write types", below).
941
942Predefined types are (if you have ideas for additional types, feel free to
943drop by and tell us):
944
945=over 4
946
947=item netstring => $string
948
949Formats the given value as netstring
950(http://cr.yp.to/proto/netstrings.txt, this is not a recommendation to use them).
951
952=cut
953
954register_write_type netstring => sub {
955 my ($self, $string) = @_;
956
957 (length $string) . ":$string,"
958};
959
960=item packstring => $format, $data
961
962An octet string prefixed with an encoded length. The encoding C<$format>
963uses the same format as a Perl C<pack> format, but must specify a single
964integer only (only one of C<cCsSlLqQiInNvVjJw> is allowed, plus an
965optional C<!>, C<< < >> or C<< > >> modifier).
966
967=cut
968
969register_write_type packstring => sub {
970 my ($self, $format, $string) = @_;
971
972 pack "$format/a*", $string
973};
974
975=item json => $array_or_hashref
976
977Encodes the given hash or array reference into a JSON object. Unless you
978provide your own JSON object, this means it will be encoded to JSON text
979in UTF-8.
980
981JSON objects (and arrays) are self-delimiting, so you can write JSON at
982one end of a handle and read them at the other end without using any
983additional framing.
984
985The generated JSON text is guaranteed not to contain any newlines: While
986this module doesn't need delimiters after or between JSON texts to be
987able to read them, many other languages depend on that.
988
989A simple RPC protocol that interoperates easily with others is to send
990JSON arrays (or objects, although arrays are usually the better choice as
991they mimic how function argument passing works) and a newline after each
992JSON text:
993
994 $handle->push_write (json => ["method", "arg1", "arg2"]); # whatever
995 $handle->push_write ("\012");
996
997An AnyEvent::Handle receiver would simply use the C<json> read type and
998rely on the fact that the newline will be skipped as leading whitespace:
999
1000 $handle->push_read (json => sub { my $array = $_[1]; ... });
1001
1002Other languages could read single lines terminated by a newline and pass
1003this line into their JSON decoder of choice.
1004
1005=cut
1006
1007sub json_coder() {
1008 eval { require JSON::XS; JSON::XS->new->utf8 }
1009 || do { require JSON; JSON->new->utf8 }
1010}
1011
1012register_write_type json => sub {
1013 my ($self, $ref) = @_;
1014
1015 my $json = $self->{json} ||= json_coder;
1016
1017 $json->encode ($ref)
1018};
1019
1020=item storable => $reference
1021
1022Freezes the given reference using L<Storable> and writes it to the
1023handle. Uses the C<nfreeze> format.
1024
1025=cut
1026
1027register_write_type storable => sub {
1028 my ($self, $ref) = @_;
1029
1030 require Storable;
1031
1032 pack "w/a*", Storable::nfreeze ($ref)
1033};
1034
1035=back
1036
1037=item $handle->push_shutdown
1038
1039Sometimes you know you want to close the socket after writing your data
1040before it was actually written. One way to do that is to replace your
1041C<on_drain> handler by a callback that shuts down the socket (and set
1042C<low_water_mark> to C<0>). This method is a shorthand for just that, and
1043replaces the C<on_drain> callback with:
1044
1045 sub { shutdown $_[0]{fh}, 1 } # for push_shutdown
1046
1047This simply shuts down the write side and signals an EOF condition to the
1048the peer.
1049
1050You can rely on the normal read queue and C<on_eof> handling
1051afterwards. This is the cleanest way to close a connection.
1052
1053This method may invoke callbacks (and therefore the handle might be
1054destroyed after it returns).
1055
1056=cut
1057
1058sub push_shutdown {
1059 my ($self) = @_;
1060
1061 delete $self->{low_water_mark};
1062 $self->on_drain (sub { shutdown $_[0]{fh}, 1 });
1063}
1064
1065=item custom write types - Package::anyevent_write_type $handle, @args
1066
1067Instead of one of the predefined types, you can also specify the name of
1068a package. AnyEvent will try to load the package and then expects to find
1069a function named C<anyevent_write_type> inside. If it isn't found, it
1070progressively tries to load the parent package until it either finds the
1071function (good) or runs out of packages (bad).
1072
1073Whenever the given C<type> is used, C<push_write> will the function with
1074the handle object and the remaining arguments.
1075
1076The function is supposed to return a single octet string that will be
1077appended to the write buffer, so you cna mentally treat this function as a
1078"arguments to on-the-wire-format" converter.
1079
1080Example: implement a custom write type C<join> that joins the remaining
1081arguments using the first one.
1082
1083 $handle->push_write (My::Type => " ", 1,2,3);
1084
1085 # uses the following package, which can be defined in the "My::Type" or in
1086 # the "My" modules to be auto-loaded, or just about anywhere when the
1087 # My::Type::anyevent_write_type is defined before invoking it.
1088
1089 package My::Type;
1090
1091 sub anyevent_write_type {
1092 my ($handle, $delim, @args) = @_;
1093
1094 join $delim, @args
1095 }
1096
1097=cut
321 1098
322############################################################################# 1099#############################################################################
323 1100
324=back 1101=back
325 1102
332ways, the "simple" way, using only C<on_read> and the "complex" way, using 1109ways, the "simple" way, using only C<on_read> and the "complex" way, using
333a queue. 1110a queue.
334 1111
335In the simple case, you just install an C<on_read> callback and whenever 1112In the simple case, you just install an C<on_read> callback and whenever
336new data arrives, it will be called. You can then remove some data (if 1113new data arrives, it will be called. You can then remove some data (if
337enough is there) from the read buffer (C<< $handle->rbuf >>) if you want 1114enough is there) from the read buffer (C<< $handle->rbuf >>). Or you can
338or not. 1115leave the data there if you want to accumulate more (e.g. when only a
1116partial message has been received so far), or change the read queue with
1117e.g. C<push_read>.
339 1118
340In the more complex case, you want to queue multiple callbacks. In this 1119In the more complex case, you want to queue multiple callbacks. In this
341case, AnyEvent::Handle will call the first queued callback each time new 1120case, AnyEvent::Handle will call the first queued callback each time new
342data arrives and removes it when it has done its job (see C<push_read>, 1121data arrives (also the first time it is queued) and remove it when it has
343below). 1122done its job (see C<push_read>, below).
344 1123
345This way you can, for example, push three line-reads, followed by reading 1124This way you can, for example, push three line-reads, followed by reading
346a chunk of data, and AnyEvent::Handle will execute them in order. 1125a chunk of data, and AnyEvent::Handle will execute them in order.
347 1126
348Example 1: EPP protocol parser. EPP sends 4 byte length info, followed by 1127Example 1: EPP protocol parser. EPP sends 4 byte length info, followed by
349the specified number of bytes which give an XML datagram. 1128the specified number of bytes which give an XML datagram.
350 1129
351 # in the default state, expect some header bytes 1130 # in the default state, expect some header bytes
352 $handle->on_read (sub { 1131 $handle->on_read (sub {
353 # some data is here, now queue the length-header-read (4 octets) 1132 # some data is here, now queue the length-header-read (4 octets)
354 shift->unshift_read_chunk (4, sub { 1133 shift->unshift_read (chunk => 4, sub {
355 # header arrived, decode 1134 # header arrived, decode
356 my $len = unpack "N", $_[1]; 1135 my $len = unpack "N", $_[1];
357 1136
358 # now read the payload 1137 # now read the payload
359 shift->unshift_read_chunk ($len, sub { 1138 shift->unshift_read (chunk => $len, sub {
360 my $xml = $_[1]; 1139 my $xml = $_[1];
361 # handle xml 1140 # handle xml
362 }); 1141 });
363 }); 1142 });
364 }); 1143 });
365 1144
366Example 2: Implement a client for a protocol that replies either with 1145Example 2: Implement a client for a protocol that replies either with "OK"
367"OK" and another line or "ERROR" for one request, and 64 bytes for the 1146and another line or "ERROR" for the first request that is sent, and 64
368second request. Due tot he availability of a full queue, we can just 1147bytes for the second request. Due to the availability of a queue, we can
369pipeline sending both requests and manipulate the queue as necessary in 1148just pipeline sending both requests and manipulate the queue as necessary
370the callbacks: 1149in the callbacks.
371 1150
372 # request one 1151When the first callback is called and sees an "OK" response, it will
1152C<unshift> another line-read. This line-read will be queued I<before> the
115364-byte chunk callback.
1154
1155 # request one, returns either "OK + extra line" or "ERROR"
373 $handle->push_write ("request 1\015\012"); 1156 $handle->push_write ("request 1\015\012");
374 1157
375 # we expect "ERROR" or "OK" as response, so push a line read 1158 # we expect "ERROR" or "OK" as response, so push a line read
376 $handle->push_read_line (sub { 1159 $handle->push_read (line => sub {
377 # if we got an "OK", we have to _prepend_ another line, 1160 # if we got an "OK", we have to _prepend_ another line,
378 # so it will be read before the second request reads its 64 bytes 1161 # so it will be read before the second request reads its 64 bytes
379 # which are already in the queue when this callback is called 1162 # which are already in the queue when this callback is called
380 # we don't do this in case we got an error 1163 # we don't do this in case we got an error
381 if ($_[1] eq "OK") { 1164 if ($_[1] eq "OK") {
382 $_[0]->unshift_read_line (sub { 1165 $_[0]->unshift_read (line => sub {
383 my $response = $_[1]; 1166 my $response = $_[1];
384 ... 1167 ...
385 }); 1168 });
386 } 1169 }
387 }); 1170 });
388 1171
389 # request two 1172 # request two, simply returns 64 octets
390 $handle->push_write ("request 2\015\012"); 1173 $handle->push_write ("request 2\015\012");
391 1174
392 # simply read 64 bytes, always 1175 # simply read 64 bytes, always
393 $handle->push_read_chunk (64, sub { 1176 $handle->push_read (chunk => 64, sub {
394 my $response = $_[1]; 1177 my $response = $_[1];
395 ... 1178 ...
396 }); 1179 });
397 1180
398=over 4 1181=over 4
399 1182
400=cut 1183=cut
401 1184
402sub _drain_rbuf { 1185sub _drain_rbuf {
403 my ($self) = @_; 1186 my ($self) = @_;
1187
1188 # avoid recursion
1189 return if $self->{_skip_drain_rbuf};
1190 local $self->{_skip_drain_rbuf} = 1;
1191
1192 while () {
1193 # we need to use a separate tls read buffer, as we must not receive data while
1194 # we are draining the buffer, and this can only happen with TLS.
1195 $self->{rbuf} .= delete $self->{_tls_rbuf}
1196 if exists $self->{_tls_rbuf};
1197
1198 my $len = length $self->{rbuf};
1199
1200 if (my $cb = shift @{ $self->{_queue} }) {
1201 unless ($cb->($self)) {
1202 # no progress can be made
1203 # (not enough data and no data forthcoming)
1204 $self->_error (Errno::EPIPE, 1), return
1205 if $self->{_eof};
1206
1207 unshift @{ $self->{_queue} }, $cb;
1208 last;
1209 }
1210 } elsif ($self->{on_read}) {
1211 last unless $len;
1212
1213 $self->{on_read}($self);
1214
1215 if (
1216 $len == length $self->{rbuf} # if no data has been consumed
1217 && !@{ $self->{_queue} } # and the queue is still empty
1218 && $self->{on_read} # but we still have on_read
1219 ) {
1220 # no further data will arrive
1221 # so no progress can be made
1222 $self->_error (Errno::EPIPE, 1), return
1223 if $self->{_eof};
1224
1225 last; # more data might arrive
1226 }
1227 } else {
1228 # read side becomes idle
1229 delete $self->{_rw} unless $self->{tls};
1230 last;
1231 }
1232 }
1233
1234 if ($self->{_eof}) {
1235 $self->{on_eof}
1236 ? $self->{on_eof}($self)
1237 : $self->_error (0, 1, "Unexpected end-of-file");
1238
1239 return;
1240 }
404 1241
405 if ( 1242 if (
406 defined $self->{rbuf_max} 1243 defined $self->{rbuf_max}
407 && $self->{rbuf_max} < length $self->{rbuf} 1244 && $self->{rbuf_max} < length $self->{rbuf}
408 ) { 1245 ) {
409 $! = &Errno::ENOSPC; return $self->error; 1246 $self->_error (Errno::ENOSPC, 1), return;
410 } 1247 }
411 1248
412 return if $self->{in_drain}; 1249 # may need to restart read watcher
413 local $self->{in_drain} = 1; 1250 unless ($self->{_rw}) {
414 1251 $self->start_read
415 while (my $len = length $self->{rbuf}) { 1252 if $self->{on_read} || @{ $self->{_queue} };
416 no strict 'refs';
417 if (my $cb = shift @{ $self->{queue} }) {
418 if (!$cb->($self)) {
419 if ($self->{eof}) {
420 # no progress can be made (not enough data and no data forthcoming)
421 $! = &Errno::EPIPE; return $self->error;
422 }
423
424 unshift @{ $self->{queue} }, $cb;
425 return;
426 }
427 } elsif ($self->{on_read}) {
428 $self->{on_read}($self);
429
430 if (
431 $self->{eof} # if no further data will arrive
432 && $len == length $self->{rbuf} # and no data has been consumed
433 && !@{ $self->{queue} } # and the queue is still empty
434 && $self->{on_read} # and we still want to read data
435 ) {
436 # then no progress can be made
437 $! = &Errno::EPIPE; return $self->error;
438 }
439 } else {
440 # read side becomes idle
441 delete $self->{rw};
442 return;
443 }
444 }
445
446 if ($self->{eof}) {
447 $self->_shutdown;
448 $self->{on_eof}($self)
449 if $self->{on_eof};
450 } 1253 }
451} 1254}
452 1255
453=item $handle->on_read ($cb) 1256=item $handle->on_read ($cb)
454 1257
455This replaces the currently set C<on_read> callback, or clears it (when 1258This replaces the currently set C<on_read> callback, or clears it (when
456the new callback is C<undef>). See the description of C<on_read> in the 1259the new callback is C<undef>). See the description of C<on_read> in the
457constructor. 1260constructor.
458 1261
1262This method may invoke callbacks (and therefore the handle might be
1263destroyed after it returns).
1264
459=cut 1265=cut
460 1266
461sub on_read { 1267sub on_read {
462 my ($self, $cb) = @_; 1268 my ($self, $cb) = @_;
463 1269
464 $self->{on_read} = $cb; 1270 $self->{on_read} = $cb;
1271 $self->_drain_rbuf if $cb;
465} 1272}
466 1273
467=item $handle->rbuf 1274=item $handle->rbuf
468 1275
469Returns the read buffer (as a modifiable lvalue). 1276Returns the read buffer (as a modifiable lvalue).
470 1277
471You can access the read buffer directly as the C<< ->{rbuf} >> member, if 1278You can access the read buffer directly as the C<< ->{rbuf} >>
472you want. 1279member, if you want. However, the only operation allowed on the
1280read buffer (apart from looking at it) is removing data from its
1281beginning. Otherwise modifying or appending to it is not allowed and will
1282lead to hard-to-track-down bugs.
473 1283
474NOTE: The read buffer should only be used or modified if the C<on_read>, 1284NOTE: The read buffer should only be used or modified if the C<on_read>,
475C<push_read> or C<unshift_read> methods are used. The other read methods 1285C<push_read> or C<unshift_read> methods are used. The other read methods
476automatically manage the read buffer. 1286automatically manage the read buffer.
477 1287
498 1308
499If enough data was available, then the callback must remove all data it is 1309If enough data was available, then the callback must remove all data it is
500interested in (which can be none at all) and return a true value. After returning 1310interested in (which can be none at all) and return a true value. After returning
501true, it will be removed from the queue. 1311true, it will be removed from the queue.
502 1312
1313These methods may invoke callbacks (and therefore the handle might be
1314destroyed after it returns).
1315
503=cut 1316=cut
1317
1318our %RH;
1319
1320sub register_read_type($$) {
1321 $RH{$_[0]} = $_[1];
1322}
504 1323
505sub push_read { 1324sub push_read {
506 my ($self, $cb) = @_; 1325 my $self = shift;
1326 my $cb = pop;
507 1327
1328 if (@_) {
1329 my $type = shift;
1330
1331 $cb = ($RH{$type} ||= _load_func "$type\::anyevent_read_type"
1332 or Carp::croak "unsupported/unloadable type '$type' passed to AnyEvent::Handle::push_read")
1333 ->($self, $cb, @_);
1334 }
1335
508 push @{ $self->{queue} }, $cb; 1336 push @{ $self->{_queue} }, $cb;
509 $self->_drain_rbuf; 1337 $self->_drain_rbuf;
510} 1338}
511 1339
512sub unshift_read { 1340sub unshift_read {
513 my ($self, $cb) = @_; 1341 my $self = shift;
1342 my $cb = pop;
514 1343
1344 if (@_) {
1345 my $type = shift;
1346
1347 $cb = ($RH{$type} or Carp::croak "unsupported type passed to AnyEvent::Handle::unshift_read")
1348 ->($self, $cb, @_);
1349 }
1350
515 push @{ $self->{queue} }, $cb; 1351 unshift @{ $self->{_queue} }, $cb;
516 $self->_drain_rbuf; 1352 $self->_drain_rbuf;
517} 1353}
518 1354
519=item $handle->push_read_chunk ($len, $cb->($self, $data)) 1355=item $handle->push_read (type => @args, $cb)
520 1356
521=item $handle->unshift_read_chunk ($len, $cb->($self, $data)) 1357=item $handle->unshift_read (type => @args, $cb)
522 1358
523Append the given callback to the end of the queue (C<push_read_chunk>) or 1359Instead of providing a callback that parses the data itself you can chose
524prepend it (C<unshift_read_chunk>). 1360between a number of predefined parsing formats, for chunks of data, lines
1361etc. You can also specify the (fully qualified) name of a package, in
1362which case AnyEvent tries to load the package and then expects to find the
1363C<anyevent_read_type> function inside (see "custom read types", below).
525 1364
526The callback will be called only once C<$len> bytes have been read, and 1365Predefined types are (if you have ideas for additional types, feel free to
527these C<$len> bytes will be passed to the callback. 1366drop by and tell us):
528 1367
529=cut 1368=over 4
530 1369
531sub _read_chunk($$) { 1370=item chunk => $octets, $cb->($handle, $data)
1371
1372Invoke the callback only once C<$octets> bytes have been read. Pass the
1373data read to the callback. The callback will never be called with less
1374data.
1375
1376Example: read 2 bytes.
1377
1378 $handle->push_read (chunk => 2, sub {
1379 warn "yay ", unpack "H*", $_[1];
1380 });
1381
1382=cut
1383
1384register_read_type chunk => sub {
532 my ($self, $len, $cb) = @_; 1385 my ($self, $cb, $len) = @_;
533 1386
534 sub { 1387 sub {
535 $len <= length $_[0]{rbuf} or return; 1388 $len <= length $_[0]{rbuf} or return;
536 $cb->($_[0], substr $_[0]{rbuf}, 0, $len, ""); 1389 $cb->($_[0], substr $_[0]{rbuf}, 0, $len, "");
537 1 1390 1
538 } 1391 }
539} 1392};
540 1393
541sub push_read_chunk { 1394=item line => [$eol, ]$cb->($handle, $line, $eol)
542 $_[0]->push_read (&_read_chunk);
543}
544
545
546sub unshift_read_chunk {
547 $_[0]->unshift_read (&_read_chunk);
548}
549
550=item $handle->push_read_line ([$eol, ]$cb->($self, $line, $eol))
551
552=item $handle->unshift_read_line ([$eol, ]$cb->($self, $line, $eol))
553
554Append the given callback to the end of the queue (C<push_read_line>) or
555prepend it (C<unshift_read_line>).
556 1395
557The callback will be called only once a full line (including the end of 1396The callback will be called only once a full line (including the end of
558line marker, C<$eol>) has been read. This line (excluding the end of line 1397line marker, C<$eol>) has been read. This line (excluding the end of line
559marker) will be passed to the callback as second argument (C<$line>), and 1398marker) will be passed to the callback as second argument (C<$line>), and
560the end of line marker as the third argument (C<$eol>). 1399the end of line marker as the third argument (C<$eol>).
571Partial lines at the end of the stream will never be returned, as they are 1410Partial lines at the end of the stream will never be returned, as they are
572not marked by the end of line marker. 1411not marked by the end of line marker.
573 1412
574=cut 1413=cut
575 1414
576sub _read_line($$) { 1415register_read_type line => sub {
577 my $self = shift; 1416 my ($self, $cb, $eol) = @_;
578 my $cb = pop;
579 my $eol = @_ ? shift : qr|(\015?\012)|;
580 my $pos;
581 1417
1418 if (@_ < 3) {
1419 # this is more than twice as fast as the generic code below
1420 sub {
1421 $_[0]{rbuf} =~ s/^([^\015\012]*)(\015?\012)// or return;
1422
1423 $cb->($_[0], $1, $2);
1424 1
1425 }
1426 } else {
582 $eol = quotemeta $eol unless ref $eol; 1427 $eol = quotemeta $eol unless ref $eol;
583 $eol = qr|^(.*?)($eol)|s; 1428 $eol = qr|^(.*?)($eol)|s;
1429
1430 sub {
1431 $_[0]{rbuf} =~ s/$eol// or return;
1432
1433 $cb->($_[0], $1, $2);
1434 1
1435 }
1436 }
1437};
1438
1439=item regex => $accept[, $reject[, $skip], $cb->($handle, $data)
1440
1441Makes a regex match against the regex object C<$accept> and returns
1442everything up to and including the match.
1443
1444Example: read a single line terminated by '\n'.
1445
1446 $handle->push_read (regex => qr<\n>, sub { ... });
1447
1448If C<$reject> is given and not undef, then it determines when the data is
1449to be rejected: it is matched against the data when the C<$accept> regex
1450does not match and generates an C<EBADMSG> error when it matches. This is
1451useful to quickly reject wrong data (to avoid waiting for a timeout or a
1452receive buffer overflow).
1453
1454Example: expect a single decimal number followed by whitespace, reject
1455anything else (not the use of an anchor).
1456
1457 $handle->push_read (regex => qr<^[0-9]+\s>, qr<[^0-9]>, sub { ... });
1458
1459If C<$skip> is given and not C<undef>, then it will be matched against
1460the receive buffer when neither C<$accept> nor C<$reject> match,
1461and everything preceding and including the match will be accepted
1462unconditionally. This is useful to skip large amounts of data that you
1463know cannot be matched, so that the C<$accept> or C<$reject> regex do not
1464have to start matching from the beginning. This is purely an optimisation
1465and is usually worth it only when you expect more than a few kilobytes.
1466
1467Example: expect a http header, which ends at C<\015\012\015\012>. Since we
1468expect the header to be very large (it isn't in practice, but...), we use
1469a skip regex to skip initial portions. The skip regex is tricky in that
1470it only accepts something not ending in either \015 or \012, as these are
1471required for the accept regex.
1472
1473 $handle->push_read (regex =>
1474 qr<\015\012\015\012>,
1475 undef, # no reject
1476 qr<^.*[^\015\012]>,
1477 sub { ... });
1478
1479=cut
1480
1481register_read_type regex => sub {
1482 my ($self, $cb, $accept, $reject, $skip) = @_;
1483
1484 my $data;
1485 my $rbuf = \$self->{rbuf};
584 1486
585 sub { 1487 sub {
586 $_[0]{rbuf} =~ s/$eol// or return; 1488 # accept
1489 if ($$rbuf =~ $accept) {
1490 $data .= substr $$rbuf, 0, $+[0], "";
1491 $cb->($self, $data);
1492 return 1;
1493 }
1494
1495 # reject
1496 if ($reject && $$rbuf =~ $reject) {
1497 $self->_error (Errno::EBADMSG);
1498 }
587 1499
588 $cb->($_[0], $1, $2); 1500 # skip
1501 if ($skip && $$rbuf =~ $skip) {
1502 $data .= substr $$rbuf, 0, $+[0], "";
1503 }
1504
1505 ()
1506 }
1507};
1508
1509=item netstring => $cb->($handle, $string)
1510
1511A netstring (http://cr.yp.to/proto/netstrings.txt, this is not an endorsement).
1512
1513Throws an error with C<$!> set to EBADMSG on format violations.
1514
1515=cut
1516
1517register_read_type netstring => sub {
1518 my ($self, $cb) = @_;
1519
1520 sub {
1521 unless ($_[0]{rbuf} =~ s/^(0|[1-9][0-9]*)://) {
1522 if ($_[0]{rbuf} =~ /[^0-9]/) {
1523 $self->_error (Errno::EBADMSG);
1524 }
1525 return;
1526 }
1527
1528 my $len = $1;
1529
1530 $self->unshift_read (chunk => $len, sub {
1531 my $string = $_[1];
1532 $_[0]->unshift_read (chunk => 1, sub {
1533 if ($_[1] eq ",") {
1534 $cb->($_[0], $string);
1535 } else {
1536 $self->_error (Errno::EBADMSG);
1537 }
1538 });
1539 });
1540
589 1 1541 1
590 } 1542 }
591} 1543};
592 1544
593sub push_read_line { 1545=item packstring => $format, $cb->($handle, $string)
594 $_[0]->push_read (&_read_line);
595}
596 1546
597sub unshift_read_line { 1547An octet string prefixed with an encoded length. The encoding C<$format>
598 $_[0]->unshift_read (&_read_line); 1548uses the same format as a Perl C<pack> format, but must specify a single
599} 1549integer only (only one of C<cCsSlLqQiInNvVjJw> is allowed, plus an
1550optional C<!>, C<< < >> or C<< > >> modifier).
1551
1552For example, DNS over TCP uses a prefix of C<n> (2 octet network order),
1553EPP uses a prefix of C<N> (4 octtes).
1554
1555Example: read a block of data prefixed by its length in BER-encoded
1556format (very efficient).
1557
1558 $handle->push_read (packstring => "w", sub {
1559 my ($handle, $data) = @_;
1560 });
1561
1562=cut
1563
1564register_read_type packstring => sub {
1565 my ($self, $cb, $format) = @_;
1566
1567 sub {
1568 # when we can use 5.10 we can use ".", but for 5.8 we use the re-pack method
1569 defined (my $len = eval { unpack $format, $_[0]{rbuf} })
1570 or return;
1571
1572 $format = length pack $format, $len;
1573
1574 # bypass unshift if we already have the remaining chunk
1575 if ($format + $len <= length $_[0]{rbuf}) {
1576 my $data = substr $_[0]{rbuf}, $format, $len;
1577 substr $_[0]{rbuf}, 0, $format + $len, "";
1578 $cb->($_[0], $data);
1579 } else {
1580 # remove prefix
1581 substr $_[0]{rbuf}, 0, $format, "";
1582
1583 # read remaining chunk
1584 $_[0]->unshift_read (chunk => $len, $cb);
1585 }
1586
1587 1
1588 }
1589};
1590
1591=item json => $cb->($handle, $hash_or_arrayref)
1592
1593Reads a JSON object or array, decodes it and passes it to the
1594callback. When a parse error occurs, an C<EBADMSG> error will be raised.
1595
1596If a C<json> object was passed to the constructor, then that will be used
1597for the final decode, otherwise it will create a JSON coder expecting UTF-8.
1598
1599This read type uses the incremental parser available with JSON version
16002.09 (and JSON::XS version 2.2) and above. You have to provide a
1601dependency on your own: this module will load the JSON module, but
1602AnyEvent does not depend on it itself.
1603
1604Since JSON texts are fully self-delimiting, the C<json> read and write
1605types are an ideal simple RPC protocol: just exchange JSON datagrams. See
1606the C<json> write type description, above, for an actual example.
1607
1608=cut
1609
1610register_read_type json => sub {
1611 my ($self, $cb) = @_;
1612
1613 my $json = $self->{json} ||= json_coder;
1614
1615 my $data;
1616 my $rbuf = \$self->{rbuf};
1617
1618 sub {
1619 my $ref = eval { $json->incr_parse ($self->{rbuf}) };
1620
1621 if ($ref) {
1622 $self->{rbuf} = $json->incr_text;
1623 $json->incr_text = "";
1624 $cb->($self, $ref);
1625
1626 1
1627 } elsif ($@) {
1628 # error case
1629 $json->incr_skip;
1630
1631 $self->{rbuf} = $json->incr_text;
1632 $json->incr_text = "";
1633
1634 $self->_error (Errno::EBADMSG);
1635
1636 ()
1637 } else {
1638 $self->{rbuf} = "";
1639
1640 ()
1641 }
1642 }
1643};
1644
1645=item storable => $cb->($handle, $ref)
1646
1647Deserialises a L<Storable> frozen representation as written by the
1648C<storable> write type (BER-encoded length prefix followed by nfreeze'd
1649data).
1650
1651Raises C<EBADMSG> error if the data could not be decoded.
1652
1653=cut
1654
1655register_read_type storable => sub {
1656 my ($self, $cb) = @_;
1657
1658 require Storable;
1659
1660 sub {
1661 # when we can use 5.10 we can use ".", but for 5.8 we use the re-pack method
1662 defined (my $len = eval { unpack "w", $_[0]{rbuf} })
1663 or return;
1664
1665 my $format = length pack "w", $len;
1666
1667 # bypass unshift if we already have the remaining chunk
1668 if ($format + $len <= length $_[0]{rbuf}) {
1669 my $data = substr $_[0]{rbuf}, $format, $len;
1670 substr $_[0]{rbuf}, 0, $format + $len, "";
1671 $cb->($_[0], Storable::thaw ($data));
1672 } else {
1673 # remove prefix
1674 substr $_[0]{rbuf}, 0, $format, "";
1675
1676 # read remaining chunk
1677 $_[0]->unshift_read (chunk => $len, sub {
1678 if (my $ref = eval { Storable::thaw ($_[1]) }) {
1679 $cb->($_[0], $ref);
1680 } else {
1681 $self->_error (Errno::EBADMSG);
1682 }
1683 });
1684 }
1685
1686 1
1687 }
1688};
1689
1690=back
1691
1692=item custom read types - Package::anyevent_read_type $handle, $cb, @args
1693
1694Instead of one of the predefined types, you can also specify the name
1695of a package. AnyEvent will try to load the package and then expects to
1696find a function named C<anyevent_read_type> inside. If it isn't found, it
1697progressively tries to load the parent package until it either finds the
1698function (good) or runs out of packages (bad).
1699
1700Whenever this type is used, C<push_read> will invoke the function with the
1701handle object, the original callback and the remaining arguments.
1702
1703The function is supposed to return a callback (usually a closure) that
1704works as a plain read callback (see C<< ->push_read ($cb) >>), so you can
1705mentally treat the function as a "configurable read type to read callback"
1706converter.
1707
1708It should invoke the original callback when it is done reading (remember
1709to pass C<$handle> as first argument as all other callbacks do that,
1710although there is no strict requirement on this).
1711
1712For examples, see the source of this module (F<perldoc -m
1713AnyEvent::Handle>, search for C<register_read_type>)).
600 1714
601=item $handle->stop_read 1715=item $handle->stop_read
602 1716
603=item $handle->start_read 1717=item $handle->start_read
604 1718
605In rare cases you actually do not want to read anything from the 1719In rare cases you actually do not want to read anything from the
606socket. In this case you can call C<stop_read>. Neither C<on_read> no 1720socket. In this case you can call C<stop_read>. Neither C<on_read> nor
607any queued callbacks will be executed then. To start readign again, call 1721any queued callbacks will be executed then. To start reading again, call
608C<start_read>. 1722C<start_read>.
1723
1724Note that AnyEvent::Handle will automatically C<start_read> for you when
1725you change the C<on_read> callback or push/unshift a read callback, and it
1726will automatically C<stop_read> for you when neither C<on_read> is set nor
1727there are any read requests in the queue.
1728
1729These methods will have no effect when in TLS mode (as TLS doesn't support
1730half-duplex connections).
609 1731
610=cut 1732=cut
611 1733
612sub stop_read { 1734sub stop_read {
613 my ($self) = @_; 1735 my ($self) = @_;
614 1736
615 delete $self->{rw}; 1737 delete $self->{_rw} unless $self->{tls};
616} 1738}
617 1739
618sub start_read { 1740sub start_read {
619 my ($self) = @_; 1741 my ($self) = @_;
620 1742
621 unless ($self->{rw} || $self->{eof}) { 1743 unless ($self->{_rw} || $self->{_eof} || !$self->{fh}) {
622 Scalar::Util::weaken $self; 1744 Scalar::Util::weaken $self;
623 1745
624 $self->{rw} = AnyEvent->io (fh => $self->{fh}, poll => "r", cb => sub { 1746 $self->{_rw} = AE::io $self->{fh}, 0, sub {
625 my $rbuf = $self->{filter_r} ? \my $buf : \$self->{rbuf}; 1747 my $rbuf = \($self->{tls} ? my $buf : $self->{rbuf});
626 my $len = sysread $self->{fh}, $$rbuf, $self->{read_size} || 8192, length $$rbuf; 1748 my $len = sysread $self->{fh}, $$rbuf, $self->{read_size} || 8192, length $$rbuf;
627 1749
628 if ($len > 0) { 1750 if ($len > 0) {
629 $self->{filter_r} 1751 $self->{_activity} = $self->{_ractivity} = AE::now;
630 ? $self->{filter_r}->($self, $rbuf) 1752
1753 if ($self->{tls}) {
1754 Net::SSLeay::BIO_write ($self->{_rbio}, $$rbuf);
1755
1756 &_dotls ($self);
1757 } else {
631 : $self->_drain_rbuf; 1758 $self->_drain_rbuf;
1759 }
632 1760
633 } elsif (defined $len) { 1761 } elsif (defined $len) {
634 delete $self->{rw}; 1762 delete $self->{_rw};
635 $self->{eof} = 1; 1763 $self->{_eof} = 1;
636 $self->_drain_rbuf; 1764 $self->_drain_rbuf;
637 1765
638 } elsif ($! != EAGAIN && $! != EINTR) { 1766 } elsif ($! != EAGAIN && $! != EINTR && $! != WSAEWOULDBLOCK) {
639 return $self->error; 1767 return $self->_error ($!, 1);
640 } 1768 }
641 }); 1769 };
642 } 1770 }
643} 1771}
644 1772
1773our $ERROR_SYSCALL;
1774our $ERROR_WANT_READ;
1775
1776sub _tls_error {
1777 my ($self, $err) = @_;
1778
1779 return $self->_error ($!, 1)
1780 if $err == Net::SSLeay::ERROR_SYSCALL ();
1781
1782 my $err =Net::SSLeay::ERR_error_string (Net::SSLeay::ERR_get_error ());
1783
1784 # reduce error string to look less scary
1785 $err =~ s/^error:[0-9a-fA-F]{8}:[^:]+:([^:]+):/\L$1: /;
1786
1787 if ($self->{_on_starttls}) {
1788 (delete $self->{_on_starttls})->($self, undef, $err);
1789 &_freetls;
1790 } else {
1791 &_freetls;
1792 $self->_error (Errno::EPROTO, 1, $err);
1793 }
1794}
1795
1796# poll the write BIO and send the data if applicable
1797# also decode read data if possible
1798# this is basiclaly our TLS state machine
1799# more efficient implementations are possible with openssl,
1800# but not with the buggy and incomplete Net::SSLeay.
645sub _dotls { 1801sub _dotls {
646 my ($self) = @_; 1802 my ($self) = @_;
647 1803
1804 my $tmp;
1805
648 if (length $self->{tls_wbuf}) { 1806 if (length $self->{_tls_wbuf}) {
649 my $len = Net::SSLeay::write ($self->{tls}, $self->{tls_wbuf}); 1807 while (($tmp = Net::SSLeay::write ($self->{tls}, $self->{_tls_wbuf})) > 0) {
650 substr $self->{tls_wbuf}, 0, $len, "" if $len > 0; 1808 substr $self->{_tls_wbuf}, 0, $tmp, "";
651 } 1809 }
652 1810
1811 $tmp = Net::SSLeay::get_error ($self->{tls}, $tmp);
1812 return $self->_tls_error ($tmp)
1813 if $tmp != $ERROR_WANT_READ
1814 && ($tmp != $ERROR_SYSCALL || $!);
1815 }
1816
653 if (defined (my $buf = Net::SSLeay::BIO_read ($self->{tls_wbio}))) { 1817 while (defined ($tmp = Net::SSLeay::read ($self->{tls}))) {
1818 unless (length $tmp) {
1819 $self->{_on_starttls}
1820 and (delete $self->{_on_starttls})->($self, undef, "EOF during handshake"); # ???
1821 &_freetls;
1822
1823 if ($self->{on_stoptls}) {
1824 $self->{on_stoptls}($self);
1825 return;
1826 } else {
1827 # let's treat SSL-eof as we treat normal EOF
1828 delete $self->{_rw};
1829 $self->{_eof} = 1;
1830 }
1831 }
1832
1833 $self->{_tls_rbuf} .= $tmp;
1834 $self->_drain_rbuf;
1835 $self->{tls} or return; # tls session might have gone away in callback
1836 }
1837
1838 $tmp = Net::SSLeay::get_error ($self->{tls}, -1);
1839 return $self->_tls_error ($tmp)
1840 if $tmp != $ERROR_WANT_READ
1841 && ($tmp != $ERROR_SYSCALL || $!);
1842
1843 while (length ($tmp = Net::SSLeay::BIO_read ($self->{_wbio}))) {
654 $self->{wbuf} .= $buf; 1844 $self->{wbuf} .= $tmp;
655 $self->_drain_wbuf; 1845 $self->_drain_wbuf;
1846 $self->{tls} or return; # tls session might have gone away in callback
656 } 1847 }
657 1848
658 if (defined (my $buf = Net::SSLeay::read ($self->{tls}))) { 1849 $self->{_on_starttls}
659 $self->{rbuf} .= $buf; 1850 and Net::SSLeay::state ($self->{tls}) == Net::SSLeay::ST_OK ()
660 $self->_drain_rbuf; 1851 and (delete $self->{_on_starttls})->($self, 1, "TLS/SSL connection established");
661 } elsif ( 1852}
662 (my $err = Net::SSLeay::get_error ($self->{tls}, -1)) 1853
1854=item $handle->starttls ($tls[, $tls_ctx])
1855
1856Instead of starting TLS negotiation immediately when the AnyEvent::Handle
1857object is created, you can also do that at a later time by calling
1858C<starttls>.
1859
1860Starting TLS is currently an asynchronous operation - when you push some
1861write data and then call C<< ->starttls >> then TLS negotiation will start
1862immediately, after which the queued write data is then sent.
1863
1864The first argument is the same as the C<tls> constructor argument (either
1865C<"connect">, C<"accept"> or an existing Net::SSLeay object).
1866
1867The second argument is the optional C<AnyEvent::TLS> object that is used
1868when AnyEvent::Handle has to create its own TLS connection object, or
1869a hash reference with C<< key => value >> pairs that will be used to
1870construct a new context.
1871
1872The TLS connection object will end up in C<< $handle->{tls} >>, the TLS
1873context in C<< $handle->{tls_ctx} >> after this call and can be used or
1874changed to your liking. Note that the handshake might have already started
1875when this function returns.
1876
1877Due to bugs in OpenSSL, it might or might not be possible to do multiple
1878handshakes on the same stream. It is best to not attempt to use the
1879stream after stopping TLS.
1880
1881This method may invoke callbacks (and therefore the handle might be
1882destroyed after it returns).
1883
1884=cut
1885
1886our %TLS_CACHE; #TODO not yet documented, should we?
1887
1888sub starttls {
1889 my ($self, $tls, $ctx) = @_;
1890
1891 Carp::croak "It is an error to call starttls on an AnyEvent::Handle object while TLS is already active, caught"
1892 if $self->{tls};
1893
1894 $self->{tls} = $tls;
1895 $self->{tls_ctx} = $ctx if @_ > 2;
1896
1897 return unless $self->{fh};
1898
1899 require Net::SSLeay;
1900
1901 $ERROR_SYSCALL = Net::SSLeay::ERROR_SYSCALL ();
663 != Net::SSLeay::ERROR_WANT_READ () 1902 $ERROR_WANT_READ = Net::SSLeay::ERROR_WANT_READ ();
664 ) { 1903
665 if ($err == Net::SSLeay::ERROR_SYSCALL ()) { 1904 $tls = delete $self->{tls};
666 $self->error; 1905 $ctx = $self->{tls_ctx};
667 } elsif ($err == Net::SSLeay::ERROR_SSL ()) { 1906
668 $! = &Errno::EIO; 1907 local $Carp::CarpLevel = 1; # skip ourselves when creating a new context or session
669 $self->error; 1908
1909 if ("HASH" eq ref $ctx) {
1910 require AnyEvent::TLS;
1911
1912 if ($ctx->{cache}) {
1913 my $key = $ctx+0;
1914 $ctx = $TLS_CACHE{$key} ||= new AnyEvent::TLS %$ctx;
1915 } else {
1916 $ctx = new AnyEvent::TLS %$ctx;
670 } 1917 }
671 1918 }
672 # all others are fine for our purposes
673 } 1919
674} 1920 $self->{tls_ctx} = $ctx || TLS_CTX ();
1921 $self->{tls} = $tls = $self->{tls_ctx}->_get_session ($tls, $self, $self->{peername});
675 1922
676# TODO: maybe document... 1923 # basically, this is deep magic (because SSL_read should have the same issues)
677sub starttls { 1924 # but the openssl maintainers basically said: "trust us, it just works".
678 my ($self, $ssl, $ctx) = @_; 1925 # (unfortunately, we have to hardcode constants because the abysmally misdesigned
679 1926 # and mismaintained ssleay-module doesn't even offer them).
680 if ($ssl eq "accept") { 1927 # http://www.mail-archive.com/openssl-dev@openssl.org/msg22420.html
681 $ssl = Net::SSLeay::new ($ctx || TLS_CTX ());
682 Net::SSLeay::set_accept_state ($ssl);
683 } elsif ($ssl eq "connect") {
684 $ssl = Net::SSLeay::new ($ctx || TLS_CTX ());
685 Net::SSLeay::set_connect_state ($ssl);
686 } 1928 #
1929 # in short: this is a mess.
1930 #
1931 # note that we do not try to keep the length constant between writes as we are required to do.
1932 # we assume that most (but not all) of this insanity only applies to non-blocking cases,
1933 # and we drive openssl fully in blocking mode here. Or maybe we don't - openssl seems to
1934 # have identity issues in that area.
1935# Net::SSLeay::CTX_set_mode ($ssl,
1936# (eval { local $SIG{__DIE__}; Net::SSLeay::MODE_ENABLE_PARTIAL_WRITE () } || 1)
1937# | (eval { local $SIG{__DIE__}; Net::SSLeay::MODE_ACCEPT_MOVING_WRITE_BUFFER () } || 2));
1938 Net::SSLeay::CTX_set_mode ($tls, 1|2);
687 1939
688 $self->{tls} = $ssl;
689
690 $self->{tls_rbio} = Net::SSLeay::BIO_new (Net::SSLeay::BIO_s_mem ()); 1940 $self->{_rbio} = Net::SSLeay::BIO_new (Net::SSLeay::BIO_s_mem ());
691 $self->{tls_wbio} = Net::SSLeay::BIO_new (Net::SSLeay::BIO_s_mem ()); 1941 $self->{_wbio} = Net::SSLeay::BIO_new (Net::SSLeay::BIO_s_mem ());
692 1942
1943 Net::SSLeay::BIO_write ($self->{_rbio}, delete $self->{rbuf});
1944
693 Net::SSLeay::set_bio ($ssl, $self->{tls_rbio}, $self->{tls_wbio}); 1945 Net::SSLeay::set_bio ($tls, $self->{_rbio}, $self->{_wbio});
694 1946
695 $self->{filter_w} = sub { 1947 $self->{_on_starttls} = sub { $_[0]{on_starttls}(@_) }
696 $_[0]{tls_wbuf} .= ${$_[1]}; 1948 if $self->{on_starttls};
1949
1950 &_dotls; # need to trigger the initial handshake
1951 $self->start_read; # make sure we actually do read
1952}
1953
1954=item $handle->stoptls
1955
1956Shuts down the SSL connection - this makes a proper EOF handshake by
1957sending a close notify to the other side, but since OpenSSL doesn't
1958support non-blocking shut downs, it is not guaranteed that you can re-use
1959the stream afterwards.
1960
1961This method may invoke callbacks (and therefore the handle might be
1962destroyed after it returns).
1963
1964=cut
1965
1966sub stoptls {
1967 my ($self) = @_;
1968
1969 if ($self->{tls} && $self->{fh}) {
1970 Net::SSLeay::shutdown ($self->{tls});
1971
697 &_dotls; 1972 &_dotls;
1973
1974# # we don't give a shit. no, we do, but we can't. no...#d#
1975# # we, we... have to use openssl :/#d#
1976# &_freetls;#d#
1977 }
1978}
1979
1980sub _freetls {
1981 my ($self) = @_;
1982
1983 return unless $self->{tls};
1984
1985 $self->{tls_ctx}->_put_session (delete $self->{tls})
1986 if $self->{tls} > 0;
1987
1988 delete @$self{qw(_rbio _wbio _tls_wbuf _on_starttls)};
1989}
1990
1991sub DESTROY {
1992 my ($self) = @_;
1993
1994 &_freetls;
1995
1996 my $linger = exists $self->{linger} ? $self->{linger} : 3600;
1997
1998 if ($linger && length $self->{wbuf} && $self->{fh}) {
1999 my $fh = delete $self->{fh};
2000 my $wbuf = delete $self->{wbuf};
2001
2002 my @linger;
2003
2004 push @linger, AE::io $fh, 1, sub {
2005 my $len = syswrite $fh, $wbuf, length $wbuf;
2006
2007 if ($len > 0) {
2008 substr $wbuf, 0, $len, "";
2009 } else {
2010 @linger = (); # end
2011 }
2012 };
2013 push @linger, AE::timer $linger, 0, sub {
2014 @linger = ();
2015 };
2016 }
2017}
2018
2019=item $handle->destroy
2020
2021Shuts down the handle object as much as possible - this call ensures that
2022no further callbacks will be invoked and as many resources as possible
2023will be freed. Any method you will call on the handle object after
2024destroying it in this way will be silently ignored (and it will return the
2025empty list).
2026
2027Normally, you can just "forget" any references to an AnyEvent::Handle
2028object and it will simply shut down. This works in fatal error and EOF
2029callbacks, as well as code outside. It does I<NOT> work in a read or write
2030callback, so when you want to destroy the AnyEvent::Handle object from
2031within such an callback. You I<MUST> call C<< ->destroy >> explicitly in
2032that case.
2033
2034Destroying the handle object in this way has the advantage that callbacks
2035will be removed as well, so if those are the only reference holders (as
2036is common), then one doesn't need to do anything special to break any
2037reference cycles.
2038
2039The handle might still linger in the background and write out remaining
2040data, as specified by the C<linger> option, however.
2041
2042=cut
2043
2044sub destroy {
2045 my ($self) = @_;
2046
2047 $self->DESTROY;
2048 %$self = ();
2049 bless $self, "AnyEvent::Handle::destroyed";
2050}
2051
2052sub AnyEvent::Handle::destroyed::AUTOLOAD {
2053 #nop
2054}
2055
2056=item $handle->destroyed
2057
2058Returns false as long as the handle hasn't been destroyed by a call to C<<
2059->destroy >>, true otherwise.
2060
2061Can be useful to decide whether the handle is still valid after some
2062callback possibly destroyed the handle. For example, C<< ->push_write >>,
2063C<< ->starttls >> and other methods can call user callbacks, which in turn
2064can destroy the handle, so work can be avoided by checking sometimes:
2065
2066 $hdl->starttls ("accept");
2067 return if $hdl->destroyed;
2068 $hdl->push_write (...
2069
2070Note that the call to C<push_write> will silently be ignored if the handle
2071has been destroyed, so often you can just ignore the possibility of the
2072handle being destroyed.
2073
2074=cut
2075
2076sub destroyed { 0 }
2077sub AnyEvent::Handle::destroyed::destroyed { 1 }
2078
2079=item AnyEvent::Handle::TLS_CTX
2080
2081This function creates and returns the AnyEvent::TLS object used by default
2082for TLS mode.
2083
2084The context is created by calling L<AnyEvent::TLS> without any arguments.
2085
2086=cut
2087
2088our $TLS_CTX;
2089
2090sub TLS_CTX() {
2091 $TLS_CTX ||= do {
2092 require AnyEvent::TLS;
2093
2094 new AnyEvent::TLS
2095 }
2096}
2097
2098=back
2099
2100
2101=head1 NONFREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS
2102
2103=over 4
2104
2105=item I C<undef> the AnyEvent::Handle reference inside my callback and
2106still get further invocations!
2107
2108That's because AnyEvent::Handle keeps a reference to itself when handling
2109read or write callbacks.
2110
2111It is only safe to "forget" the reference inside EOF or error callbacks,
2112from within all other callbacks, you need to explicitly call the C<<
2113->destroy >> method.
2114
2115=item I get different callback invocations in TLS mode/Why can't I pause
2116reading?
2117
2118Unlike, say, TCP, TLS connections do not consist of two independent
2119communication channels, one for each direction. Or put differently, the
2120read and write directions are not independent of each other: you cannot
2121write data unless you are also prepared to read, and vice versa.
2122
2123This means that, in TLS mode, you might get C<on_error> or C<on_eof>
2124callback invocations when you are not expecting any read data - the reason
2125is that AnyEvent::Handle always reads in TLS mode.
2126
2127During the connection, you have to make sure that you always have a
2128non-empty read-queue, or an C<on_read> watcher. At the end of the
2129connection (or when you no longer want to use it) you can call the
2130C<destroy> method.
2131
2132=item How do I read data until the other side closes the connection?
2133
2134If you just want to read your data into a perl scalar, the easiest way
2135to achieve this is by setting an C<on_read> callback that does nothing,
2136clearing the C<on_eof> callback and in the C<on_error> callback, the data
2137will be in C<$_[0]{rbuf}>:
2138
2139 $handle->on_read (sub { });
2140 $handle->on_eof (undef);
2141 $handle->on_error (sub {
2142 my $data = delete $_[0]{rbuf};
2143 });
2144
2145The reason to use C<on_error> is that TCP connections, due to latencies
2146and packets loss, might get closed quite violently with an error, when in
2147fact all data has been received.
2148
2149It is usually better to use acknowledgements when transferring data,
2150to make sure the other side hasn't just died and you got the data
2151intact. This is also one reason why so many internet protocols have an
2152explicit QUIT command.
2153
2154=item I don't want to destroy the handle too early - how do I wait until
2155all data has been written?
2156
2157After writing your last bits of data, set the C<on_drain> callback
2158and destroy the handle in there - with the default setting of
2159C<low_water_mark> this will be called precisely when all data has been
2160written to the socket:
2161
2162 $handle->push_write (...);
2163 $handle->on_drain (sub {
2164 warn "all data submitted to the kernel\n";
2165 undef $handle;
2166 });
2167
2168If you just want to queue some data and then signal EOF to the other side,
2169consider using C<< ->push_shutdown >> instead.
2170
2171=item I want to contact a TLS/SSL server, I don't care about security.
2172
2173If your TLS server is a pure TLS server (e.g. HTTPS) that only speaks TLS,
2174connect to it and then create the AnyEvent::Handle with the C<tls>
2175parameter:
2176
2177 tcp_connect $host, $port, sub {
2178 my ($fh) = @_;
2179
2180 my $handle = new AnyEvent::Handle
2181 fh => $fh,
2182 tls => "connect",
2183 on_error => sub { ... };
2184
2185 $handle->push_write (...);
698 }; 2186 };
699 $self->{filter_r} = sub {
700 Net::SSLeay::BIO_write ($_[0]{tls_rbio}, ${$_[1]});
701 &_dotls;
702 };
703}
704 2187
705sub DESTROY { 2188=item I want to contact a TLS/SSL server, I do care about security.
706 my $self = shift;
707 2189
708 Net::SSLeay::free (delete $self->{tls}) if $self->{tls}; 2190Then you should additionally enable certificate verification, including
709} 2191peername verification, if the protocol you use supports it (see
2192L<AnyEvent::TLS>, C<verify_peername>).
710 2193
711=item AnyEvent::Handle::TLS_CTX 2194E.g. for HTTPS:
712 2195
713This function creates and returns the Net::SSLeay::CTX object used by 2196 tcp_connect $host, $port, sub {
714default for TLS mode. 2197 my ($fh) = @_;
715 2198
716The context is created like this: 2199 my $handle = new AnyEvent::Handle
2200 fh => $fh,
2201 peername => $host,
2202 tls => "connect",
2203 tls_ctx => { verify => 1, verify_peername => "https" },
2204 ...
717 2205
718 Net::SSLeay::load_error_strings; 2206Note that you must specify the hostname you connected to (or whatever
719 Net::SSLeay::SSLeay_add_ssl_algorithms; 2207"peername" the protocol needs) as the C<peername> argument, otherwise no
720 Net::SSLeay::randomize; 2208peername verification will be done.
721 2209
722 my $CTX = Net::SSLeay::CTX_new; 2210The above will use the system-dependent default set of trusted CA
2211certificates. If you want to check against a specific CA, add the
2212C<ca_file> (or C<ca_cert>) arguments to C<tls_ctx>:
723 2213
724 Net::SSLeay::CTX_set_options $CTX, Net::SSLeay::OP_ALL 2214 tls_ctx => {
2215 verify => 1,
2216 verify_peername => "https",
2217 ca_file => "my-ca-cert.pem",
2218 },
725 2219
726=cut 2220=item I want to create a TLS/SSL server, how do I do that?
727 2221
728our $TLS_CTX; 2222Well, you first need to get a server certificate and key. You have
2223three options: a) ask a CA (buy one, use cacert.org etc.) b) create a
2224self-signed certificate (cheap. check the search engine of your choice,
2225there are many tutorials on the net) or c) make your own CA (tinyca2 is a
2226nice program for that purpose).
729 2227
730sub TLS_CTX() { 2228Then create a file with your private key (in PEM format, see
731 $TLS_CTX || do { 2229L<AnyEvent::TLS>), followed by the certificate (also in PEM format). The
732 require Net::SSLeay; 2230file should then look like this:
733 2231
734 Net::SSLeay::load_error_strings (); 2232 -----BEGIN RSA PRIVATE KEY-----
735 Net::SSLeay::SSLeay_add_ssl_algorithms (); 2233 ...header data
736 Net::SSLeay::randomize (); 2234 ... lots of base64'y-stuff
2235 -----END RSA PRIVATE KEY-----
737 2236
738 $TLS_CTX = Net::SSLeay::CTX_new (); 2237 -----BEGIN CERTIFICATE-----
2238 ... lots of base64'y-stuff
2239 -----END CERTIFICATE-----
739 2240
740 Net::SSLeay::CTX_set_options ($TLS_CTX, Net::SSLeay::OP_ALL ()); 2241The important bits are the "PRIVATE KEY" and "CERTIFICATE" parts. Then
2242specify this file as C<cert_file>:
741 2243
742 $TLS_CTX 2244 tcp_server undef, $port, sub {
743 } 2245 my ($fh) = @_;
744} 2246
2247 my $handle = new AnyEvent::Handle
2248 fh => $fh,
2249 tls => "accept",
2250 tls_ctx => { cert_file => "my-server-keycert.pem" },
2251 ...
2252
2253When you have intermediate CA certificates that your clients might not
2254know about, just append them to the C<cert_file>.
745 2255
746=back 2256=back
747 2257
2258
2259=head1 SUBCLASSING AnyEvent::Handle
2260
2261In many cases, you might want to subclass AnyEvent::Handle.
2262
2263To make this easier, a given version of AnyEvent::Handle uses these
2264conventions:
2265
2266=over 4
2267
2268=item * all constructor arguments become object members.
2269
2270At least initially, when you pass a C<tls>-argument to the constructor it
2271will end up in C<< $handle->{tls} >>. Those members might be changed or
2272mutated later on (for example C<tls> will hold the TLS connection object).
2273
2274=item * other object member names are prefixed with an C<_>.
2275
2276All object members not explicitly documented (internal use) are prefixed
2277with an underscore character, so the remaining non-C<_>-namespace is free
2278for use for subclasses.
2279
2280=item * all members not documented here and not prefixed with an underscore
2281are free to use in subclasses.
2282
2283Of course, new versions of AnyEvent::Handle may introduce more "public"
2284member variables, but that's just life. At least it is documented.
2285
2286=back
2287
748=head1 AUTHOR 2288=head1 AUTHOR
749 2289
750Robin Redeker C<< <elmex at ta-sa.org> >>, Marc Lehmann <schmorp@schmorp.de>. 2290Robin Redeker C<< <elmex at ta-sa.org> >>, Marc Lehmann <schmorp@schmorp.de>.
751 2291
752=cut 2292=cut

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