Net::SSLeay::Handle - Perl module that lets SSL (HTTPS) sockets be handled as standard file handles.
use Net::SSLeay::Handle qw/shutdown/;
my ($host, $port) = ("localhost", 443);
tie(*SSL, "Net::SSLeay::Handle", $host, $port);
print SSL "GET / HTTP/1.0\r\n";
shutdown(\*SSL, 1);
print while (<SSL>);
close SSL;
User Contributed Perl Documentation Net::SSLeay::Handle(3)
NAME
Net::SSLeay::Handle - Perl module that lets SSL (HTTPS) sockets be
handled as standard file handles.
SYNOPSIS
use Net::SSLeay::Handle qw/shutdown/;
my ($host, $port) = ("localhost", 443);
tie(*SSL, "Net::SSLeay::Handle", $host, $port);
print SSL "GET / HTTP/1.0\r\n";
shutdown(\*SSL, 1);
print while (<SSL>);
close SSL;
DESCRIPTION
Net::SSLeay::Handle allows you to request and receive HTTPS web pages
using "old-fashion" file handles as in:
print SSL "GET / HTTP/1.0\r\n";
and
print while (<SSL>);
If you export the shutdown routine, then the only extra code that you
need to add to your program is the tie function as in:
my $socket;
if ($scheme eq "https") {
tie(*S2, "Net::SSLeay::Handle", $host, $port);
$socket = \*S2;
else {
$socket = Net::SSLeay::Handle->make_socket($host, $port);
}
print $socket $request_headers;
...
FUNCTIONS
shutdown
shutdown(\*SOCKET, $mode)
Calls to the main shutdown() don't work with tied sockets created
with this module. This shutdown should be able to distinquish
between tied and untied sockets and do the right thing.
debug
my $debug = Net::SSLeay::Handle->debug()
Net::SSLeay::Handle->debug(1)
Get/set debugging mode. Always returns the debug value before the
function call. if an additional argument is given the debug option
will be set to this value.
make_socket
my $sock = Net::SSLeay::Handle->make_socket($host, $port);
Creates a socket that is connected to $post using $port. It uses
$Net::SSLeay::proxyhost and proxyport if set and authentificates
itself against this proxy depending on $Net::SSLeay::proxyauth. It
also turns autoflush on for the created socket.
USING EXISTING SOCKETS
One of the motivations for writing this module was to avoid duplicating
socket creation code (which is mostly error handling). The calls to
tie() above where it is passed a $host and $port is provided for
convenience testing. If you already have a socket connected to the
right host and port, S1, then you can do something like:
my $socket \*S1;
if ($scheme eq "https") {
tie(*S2, "Net::SSLeay::Handle", $socket);
$socket = \*S2;
}
my $last_sel = select($socket); $| = 1; select($last_sel);
print $socket $request_headers;
...
Note: As far as I know you must be careful with the globs in the tie()
function. The first parameter must be a glob (*SOMETHING) and the last
parameter must be a reference to a glob (\*SOMETHING_ELSE) or a scaler
that was assigned to a reference to a glob (as in the example above)
Also, the two globs must be different. When I tried to use the same
glob, I got a core dump.
EXPORT
None by default.
You can export the shutdown() function.
It is suggested that you do export shutdown() or use the fully
qualified Net::SSLeay::Handle::shutdown() function to shutdown SSL
sockets. It should be smart enough to distinguish between SSL and non-
SSL sockets and do the right thing.
EXAMPLES
use Net::SSLeay::Handle qw/shutdown/;
my ($host, $port) = ("localhost", 443);
tie(*SSL, "Net::SSLeay::Handle", $host, $port);
print SSL "GET / HTTP/1.0\r\n";
shutdown(\*SSL, 1);
print while (<SSL>);
close SSL;
TODO
Better error handling. Callback routine?
CAVEATS
Tying to a file handle is a little tricky (for me at least).
The first parameter to tie() must be a glob (*SOMETHING) and the last
parameter must be a reference to a glob (\*SOMETHING_ELSE) or a scaler
that was assigned to a reference to a glob ($s = \*SOMETHING_ELSE).
Also, the two globs must be different. When I tried to use the same
glob, I got a core dump.
I was able to associate attributes to globs created by this module
(like *SSL above) by making a hash of hashes keyed by the file head1.
Support for old perls may not be 100%. If in trouble try 5.6.0 or
newer.
CHANGES
Please see Net-SSLeay-Handle-0.50/Changes file.
KNOWN BUGS
If you let this module construct sockets for you with Perl versions
below v.5.6 then there is a slight memory leak. Other upgrade your
Perl, or create the sockets yourself. The leak was created to let
these older versions of Perl access more than one Handle at a time.
AUTHOR
Jim Bowlin jbowlin@linklint.org
ATTRIBUTES
See attributes(7) for descriptions of the following attributes:
+---------------+-------------------------------+
|ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE |
+---------------+-------------------------------+
|Availability | library/perl-5/net-ssleay-532 |
+---------------+-------------------------------+
|Stability | Volatile |
+---------------+-------------------------------+
SEE ALSO
Net::SSLeay, perl(1), http://openssl.org/
NOTES
Source code for open source software components in Oracle Solaris can
be found at https://www.oracle.com/downloads/opensource/solaris-source-
code-downloads.html.
This software was built from source available at
https://github.com/oracle/solaris-userland. The original community
source was downloaded from
http://search.cpan.org/CPAN/authors/id/M/MI/MIKEM/Net-
SSLeay-1.80.tar.gz.
Further information about this software can be found on the open source
community website at http://search.cpan.org/dist/Net-SSLeay/.
perl v5.32.0 2016-10-31 Net::SSLeay::Handle(3)