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Net::SSLGlue::Socket(3pm) User Contributed Perl Documentation Net::SSLGlue::Socket(3pm)

NAME

Net::SSLGlue::Socket - socket which can be either SSL or plain IP (IPv4/IPv6)

SYNOPSIS

    use Net::SSLGlue::Socket;
    # SSL right from start
    my $ssl = Net::SSLGlue::Socket->new(
        PeerHost => ...,  # IPv4|IPv6 address
        PeerPort => ...,
        SSL => 1,
        SSL_ca_path => ...
    );
    # SSL through upgrade of plain connection
    my $plain = Net::SSLGlue::Socket->new(...);
    $plain->start_SSL( SSL_ca_path => ... );
    ...
    $plain->stop_SSL

DESCRIPTION

First, it is recommended to use IO::Socket::SSL directly instead of this module, since this kind of functionality is available in IO::Socket::SSL since version 1.994.

Net::SSLGlue::Socket implements a socket which can be either plain or SSL. If IO::Socket::IP or IO::Socket::INET6 are installed it will also transparently handle IPv6 connections.

A socket can be either start directly with SSL or it can be start plain and later be upgraded to SSL (because of a STARTTLS commando or similar) and also downgraded again.

It is possible but not recommended to use the socket in non-blocking mode, because in this case special care must be taken with SSL (see documentation of IO::Socket::SSL).

Additionally to the usual socket methods the following methods are defined or extended:

METHODS

The method "new" of Net::SSLGlue::Socket can have the argument SSL. If this is true the SSL upgrade will be done immediately. If not set any SSL_* args will still be saved and used at a later start_SSL call.
This will upgrade the plain socket to SSL. See IO::Socket::SSL for arguments to "start_SSL". Any SSL_* arguments given to new will be applied here too.
This will downgrade the socket from SSL to plain.
Once the SSL connection is established you can use this method to get information about the certificate. See the IO::Socket::SSL documentation.
This will check for available data. For a plain socket this will only use "select" to check the socket, but for SSL it will check if there are any pending data before trying a select. Because SSL needs to read the whole frame before decryption can be done, a successful return of can_read is no guarantee that data can be read immediately, only that new data are either available or in the process of arriving.

SEE ALSO

IO::Socket::SSL

COPYRIGHT

This module is copyright (c) 2013..2015, Steffen Ullrich. All Rights Reserved. This module is free software. It may be used, redistributed and/or modified under the same terms as Perl itself.

2018-04-10 perl v5.26.1