Merge pull request #539 from alexcrichton/zero-write

Handle zero-length writes in SSL_write
This commit is contained in:
Steven Fackler 2016-12-20 16:32:31 -08:00 committed by GitHub
commit 593e530ba2
2 changed files with 24 additions and 0 deletions

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@ -1506,6 +1506,15 @@ impl<S: Read + Write> SslStream<S> {
/// This is particularly useful with a nonblocking socket, where the error
/// value will identify if OpenSSL is waiting on read or write readiness.
pub fn ssl_read(&mut self, buf: &mut [u8]) -> Result<usize, Error> {
// The intepretation of the return code here is a little odd with a
// zero-length write. OpenSSL will likely correctly report back to us
// that it read zero bytes, but zero is also the sentinel for "error".
// To avoid that confusion short-circuit that logic and return quickly
// if `buf` has a length of zero.
if buf.len() == 0 {
return Ok(0)
}
let ret = self.ssl.read(buf);
if ret > 0 {
Ok(ret as usize)
@ -1523,6 +1532,11 @@ impl<S: Read + Write> SslStream<S> {
/// This is particularly useful with a nonblocking socket, where the error
/// value will identify if OpenSSL is waiting on read or write readiness.
pub fn ssl_write(&mut self, buf: &[u8]) -> Result<usize, Error> {
// See above for why we short-circuit on zero-length buffers
if buf.len() == 0 {
return Ok(0)
}
let ret = self.ssl.write(buf);
if ret > 0 {
Ok(ret as usize)

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@ -421,6 +421,16 @@ fn test_write() {
stream.flush().unwrap();
}
#[test]
fn zero_length_buffers() {
let (_s, stream) = Server::new();
let ctx = SslContext::builder(SslMethod::tls()).unwrap();
let mut stream = Ssl::new(&ctx.build()).unwrap().connect(stream).unwrap();
assert_eq!(stream.write(b"").unwrap(), 0);
assert_eq!(stream.read(&mut []).unwrap(), 0);
}
run_test!(get_peer_certificate, |method, stream| {
let ctx = SslContext::builder(method).unwrap();
let stream = Ssl::new(&ctx.build()).unwrap().connect(stream).unwrap();