An ssl-wrapped socket now returns '' on EOF, just like a regular

socket -- as suggested by Clarence Gardner.

Fix httplib to comply with the new ssl-socket interface.
This commit is contained in:
Jeremy Hylton 2001-02-01 23:35:20 +00:00
parent 0072d5aa33
commit 42dd01add5
2 changed files with 11 additions and 10 deletions

View File

@ -575,13 +575,16 @@ class FakeSocket:
if mode != 'r' and mode != 'rb':
raise UnimplementedFileMode()
msgbuf = ""
msgbuf = []
while 1:
try:
msgbuf = msgbuf + self.__ssl.read()
buf = self.__ssl.read()
except socket.sslerror, msg:
break
return StringIO(msgbuf)
if buf == '':
break
msgbuf.append(buf)
return StringIO("".join(msgbuf))
def send(self, stuff, flags = 0):
return self.__ssl.write(stuff)
@ -809,6 +812,7 @@ def test():
if hasattr(socket, 'ssl'):
host = 'sourceforge.net'
selector = '/projects/python'
hs = HTTPS()
hs.connect(host)
hs.putrequest('GET', selector)

View File

@ -2165,17 +2165,14 @@ static PyObject *SSL_SSLread(SSLObject *self, PyObject *args)
res = SSL_get_error(self->ssl, count);
switch (res) {
case 0: /* Good return value! */
case SSL_ERROR_NONE:
assert(count > 0);
break;
case 6:
PyErr_SetString(SSLErrorObject, "EOF");
Py_DECREF(buf);
return NULL;
case SSL_ERROR_ZERO_RETURN: /* normal EOF */
assert(count == 0);
break;
case 5:
default:
return PyErr_SetFromErrno(SSLErrorObject);
break;
}
fflush(stderr);