/* ** JNetLib ** Copyright (C) 2000-2001 Nullsoft, Inc. ** Author: Justin Frankel ** File: connection.h - JNL TCP connection interface ** License: see jnetlib.h ** ** Usage: ** 1. Create a JNL_Connection object, optionally specifying a JNL_AsyncDNS ** object to use (or NULL for none, or JNL_CONNECTION_AUTODNS for auto), ** and the send and receive buffer sizes. ** 2. Call connect() to have it connect to a host/port (the hostname will be ** resolved if possible). ** 3. call run() with the maximum send/recv amounts, and optionally parameters ** so you can tell how much has been send/received. You want to do this a lot, while: ** 4. check get_state() to check the state of the connection. The states are: ** JNL_Connection::STATE_ERROR ** - an error has occured on the connection. the connection has closed, ** and you can no longer write to the socket (there still might be ** data in the receive buffer - use recv_bytes_available()). ** JNL_Connection::STATE_NOCONNECTION ** - no connection has been made yet. call connect() already! :) ** JNL_Connection::STATE_RESOLVING ** - the connection is still waiting for a JNL_AsycnDNS to resolve the ** host. ** JNL_Connection::STATE_CONNECTING ** - the asynchronous call to connect() is still running. ** JNL_Connection::STATE_CONNECTED ** - the connection has connected, all is well. ** JNL_Connection::STATE_CLOSING ** - the connection is closing. This happens after a call to close, ** without the quick parameter set. This means that the connection ** will close once the data in the send buffer is sent (data could ** still be being received when it would be closed). After it is ** closed, the state will transition to: ** JNL_Connection::STATE_CLOSED ** - the connection has closed, generally without error. There still ** might be data in the receieve buffer, use recv_bytes_available(). ** 5. Use send() and send_string() to send data. You can use ** send_bytes_in_queue() to see how much has yet to go out, or ** send_bytes_available() to see how much you can write. If you use send() ** or send_string() and not enough room is available, both functions will ** return error ( < 0) ** 6. Use recv() and recv_line() to get data. If you want to see how much data ** there is, use recv_bytes_available() and recv_lines_available(). If you ** call recv() and not enough data is available, recv() will return how much ** data was actually read. See comments at the function defs. ** ** 7. To close, call close(1) for a quick close, or close() for a close that will ** make the socket close after sending all the data sent. ** ** 8. delete ye' ol' object. */ #ifndef _CONNECTION_H_ #define _CONNECTION_H_ #include "asyncdns.h" #define JNL_CONNECTION_AUTODNS ((JNL_AsyncDNS*)-1) struct sockaddr_in; class JNL_Connection { public: typedef enum { STATE_ERROR, STATE_NOCONNECTION, STATE_RESOLVING, STATE_CONNECTING, STATE_CONNECTED, STATE_CLOSING, STATE_CLOSED } state; /* ** Joshua Teitelbaum, 1/27/2006 adding virtual */ JNL_Connection(JNL_AsyncDNS *dns=JNL_CONNECTION_AUTODNS, int sendbufsize=8192, int recvbufsize=8192); virtual ~JNL_Connection(); public: void connect(char *hostname, int port); virtual void connect(int sock, struct sockaddr_in *loc=NULL); // used by the listen object, usually not needed by users. /* ** Joshua Teitelbaum 2/2/2006 ** Need to make this virtual to ensure SSL can init properly */ virtual void run(int max_send_bytes=-1, int max_recv_bytes=-1, int *bytes_sent=NULL, int *bytes_rcvd=NULL); int get_state() { return m_state; } char *get_errstr() { return m_errorstr; } void close(int quick=0); void flush_send(void) { m_send_len=m_send_pos=0; } int send_bytes_in_queue(void); int send_bytes_available(void); int send(const void *data, int length); // returns -1 if not enough room inline int send_bytes(const void *data, int length) { return send(data, length); } int send_string(const char *line); // returns -1 if not enough room int recv_bytes_available(void); int recv_bytes(void *data, int maxlength); // returns actual bytes read unsigned int recv_int(void); int recv_lines_available(void); int recv_line(char *line, int maxlength); // returns 0 if the line was terminated with a \r or \n, 1 if not. // (i.e. if you specify maxlength=10, and the line is 12 bytes long // it will return 1. or if there is no \r or \n and that's all the data // the connection has.) int peek_bytes(void *data, int maxlength); // returns bytes peeked unsigned long get_interface(void); // this returns the interface the connection is on unsigned long get_remote(void); // remote host ip. short get_remote_port(void); // this returns the remote port of connection protected: int m_socket; short m_remote_port; char *m_recv_buffer; char *m_send_buffer; int m_recv_buffer_len; int m_send_buffer_len; int m_recv_pos; int m_recv_len; int m_send_pos; int m_send_len; struct sockaddr_in *m_saddr; char m_host[256]; JNL_AsyncDNS *m_dns; int m_dns_owned; state m_state; char *m_errorstr; int getbfromrecv(int pos, int remove); // used by recv_line* /* ** Joshua Teitelbaum 1/27/2006 Adding new BSD socket analogues for SSL compatibility */ virtual void socket_shutdown(); virtual int socket_recv(char *buf, int len, int options); virtual int socket_send(char *buf, int len, int options); virtual int socket_connect(); virtual void on_socket_connected(); }; #endif // _Connection_H_