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NAMEBIO_socket, BIO_bind, BIO_connect, BIO_listen, BIO_accept_ex, BIO_closesocket - BIO socket communication setup routinesSYNOPSIS#include <openssl/bio.h> int BIO_socket(int domain, int socktype, int protocol, int options); int BIO_bind(int sock, const BIO_ADDR *addr, int options); int BIO_connect(int sock, const BIO_ADDR *addr, int options); int BIO_listen(int sock, const BIO_ADDR *addr, int options); int BIO_accept_ex(int accept_sock, BIO_ADDR *peer, int options); int BIO_closesocket(int sock); DESCRIPTIONBIO_socket() creates a socket in the domain domain, of type socktype and protocol. Socket options are currently unused, but is present for future use.BIO_bind() binds the source address and service to a socket and may be useful before calling BIO_connect(). The options may include BIO_SOCK_REUSEADDR, which is described in "FLAGS" below. BIO_connect() connects sock to the address and service given by addr. Connection options may be zero or any combination of BIO_SOCK_KEEPALIVE, BIO_SOCK_NONBLOCK and BIO_SOCK_NODELAY. The flags are described in "FLAGS" below. BIO_listen() has sock start listening on the address and service given by addr. Connection options may be zero or any combination of BIO_SOCK_KEEPALIVE, BIO_SOCK_NONBLOCK, BIO_SOCK_NODELAY, BIO_SOCK_REUSEADDR and BIO_SOCK_V6_ONLY. The flags are described in "FLAGS" below. BIO_accept_ex() waits for an incoming connections on the given socket accept_sock. When it gets a connection, the address and port of the peer gets stored in peer if that one is non-NULL. Accept options may be zero or BIO_SOCK_NONBLOCK, and is applied on the accepted socket. The flags are described in "FLAGS" below. BIO_closesocket() closes sock. FLAGS
These flags are bit flags, so they are to be combined with the "|" operator, for example: BIO_connect(sock, addr, BIO_SOCK_KEEPALIVE | BIO_SOCK_NONBLOCK); RETURN VALUESBIO_socket() returns the socket number on success or INVALID_SOCKET (-1) on error. When an error has occurred, the OpenSSL error stack will hold the error data and errno has the system error.BIO_bind(), BIO_connect() and BIO_listen() return 1 on success or 0 on error. When an error has occurred, the OpenSSL error stack will hold the error data and errno has the system error. BIO_accept_ex() returns the accepted socket on success or INVALID_SOCKET (-1) on error. When an error has occurred, the OpenSSL error stack will hold the error data and errno has the system error. SEE ALSOBIO_ADDR(3)HISTORYBIO_gethostname(), BIO_get_port(), BIO_get_host_ip(), BIO_get_accept_socket() and BIO_accept() were deprecated in OpenSSL 1.1.0. Use the functions described above instead.COPYRIGHTCopyright 2016-2020 The OpenSSL Project Authors. All Rights Reserved.Licensed under the Apache License 2.0 (the "License"). You may not use this file except in compliance with the License. You can obtain a copy in the file LICENSE in the source distribution or at <https://www.openssl.org/source/license.html>.
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