>#include <stdio.h>
>#include "openssl/bio.h"

>int main ()
>{
>    BIO *bio_out;
>    bio_out = BIO_new_fp(stdout, BIO_NOCLOSE);
>    BIO_printf(bio_out, "Hello World\n");
>
>    getchar();
>
>    return(0);
>}

>The code was compiled successfully.

>When the code went to "BIO_printf(bio_out, "Hello World\n");", it stoped
>and exited without any error information.

>Could you tell me why? Does my program need further configurations?

        I'll try to be kind. The problem is that you never asked it to do 
anything.
You created a BIO attached to 'stdout', you put some bytes in the BIO (which
is a buffer), then you waited for a character, and then you terminated your
program (destroying the BIO without giving it any chance to write to
stdout).

        DS


--- But I also tried the same program (on Redhat Linux though) and it
printed "Hello World" on the terminal. Am I making any mistake here? I ask
this since you say that "destroying the BIO without giving it any chance to
write to stdout", but it wrote to stdout in my case.

Please be kind to me also.


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