Tom Lane wrote: > Magnus Hagander <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: >> Attached patch replaces the SSL BIO wrapper code we have now, with one >> that directly calls the send() and recv() functions instead. THis means >> that they get passed through the rewrite macros to our internal >> functions on Win32, and I think this will fix some of the strange errors >> that seem to be platform specific there (there are some really hard to >> reproduce bug reports around that). > > Hmm. Basically what this is doing is exactly what the comment says we > didn't want to do, namely copy-and-paste the implementations of > OpenSSL's socket BIO functions. How stable is that code? If the > functions haven't changed textually in a long time (at least across all > the OpenSSL versions we claim to support) then maybe it's okay.
The logic in it is identical to the original import of code in OpenSSL. It originally had #ifdefs around how the BIO interface worked. That was tidied up in a commit back in 2001. I think it's fair to say it's been pretty stable. I don't read the comment as saying that, fwiw. It just says we may eventually need to do what I did now, but for other reasons. Do you have a comment around the "should we prepare for read even though it's a write" part? //Magnus -- Sent via pgsql-hackers mailing list (pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org) To make changes to your subscription: http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-hackers