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* DO NOT ALTER OR REMOVE COPYRIGHT NOTICES OR THIS FILE HEADER.
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*
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* ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or
* FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License
* version 2 for more details (a copy is included in the LICENSE file that
* accompanied this code).
*
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*
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package sun.security.ssl;
import java.io.OutputStream;
import java.io.IOException;
import java.security.MessageDigest;
Output stream for handshake data. This is used only internally
to the SSL classes.
MT note: one thread at a time is presumed be writing handshake
messages, but (after initial connection setup) it's possible to
have other threads reading/writing application data. It's the
SSLSocketImpl class that synchronizes record writes.
Author: David Brownell
/**
* Output stream for handshake data. This is used only internally
* to the SSL classes.
*
* MT note: one thread at a time is presumed be writing handshake
* messages, but (after initial connection setup) it's possible to
* have other threads reading/writing application data. It's the
* SSLSocketImpl class that synchronizes record writes.
*
* @author David Brownell
*/
class HandshakeOutStream extends OutputStream {
private SSLSocketImpl socket;
private SSLEngineImpl engine;
OutputRecord r;
HandshakeOutStream(ProtocolVersion protocolVersion,
ProtocolVersion helloVersion, HandshakeHash handshakeHash,
SSLSocketImpl socket) {
this.socket = socket;
r = new OutputRecord(Record.ct_handshake);
init(protocolVersion, helloVersion, handshakeHash);
}
HandshakeOutStream(ProtocolVersion protocolVersion,
ProtocolVersion helloVersion, HandshakeHash handshakeHash,
SSLEngineImpl engine) {
this.engine = engine;
r = new EngineOutputRecord(Record.ct_handshake, engine);
init(protocolVersion, helloVersion, handshakeHash);
}
private void init(ProtocolVersion protocolVersion,
ProtocolVersion helloVersion, HandshakeHash handshakeHash) {
r.setVersion(protocolVersion);
r.setHelloVersion(helloVersion);
r.setHandshakeHash(handshakeHash);
}
/*
* Update the handshake data hashes ... mostly for use after a
* client cert has been sent, so the cert verify message can be
* constructed correctly yet without forcing extra I/O. In all
* other cases, automatic hash calculation suffices.
*/
void doHashes() {
r.doHashes();
}
/*
* Write some data out onto the stream ... buffers as much as possible.
* Hashes are updated automatically if something gets flushed to the
* network (e.g. a big cert message etc).
*/
public void write(byte buf[], int off, int len) throws IOException {
while (len > 0) {
int howmuch = Math.min(len, r.availableDataBytes());
if (howmuch == 0) {
flush();
} else {
r.write(buf, off, howmuch);
off += howmuch;
len -= howmuch;
}
}
}
/*
* write-a-byte
*/
public void write(int i) throws IOException {
if (r.availableDataBytes() < 1) {
flush();
}
r.write(i);
}
public void flush() throws IOException {
if (socket != null) {
try {
socket.writeRecord(r);
} catch (IOException e) {
// Had problems writing; check if there was an
// alert from peer. If alert received, waitForClose
// will throw an exception for the alert
socket.waitForClose(true);
// No alert was received, just rethrow exception
throw e;
}
} else { // engine != null
/*
* Even if record might be empty, flush anyway in case
* there is a finished handshake message that we need
* to queue.
*/
engine.writeRecord((EngineOutputRecord)r);
}
}
/*
* Tell the OutputRecord that a finished message was
* contained either in this record or the one immeiately
* preceeding it. We need to reliably pass back notifications
* that a finish message occured.
*/
void setFinishedMsg() {
assert(socket == null);
((EngineOutputRecord)r).setFinishedMsg();
}
/*
* Put integers encoded in standard 8, 16, 24, and 32 bit
* big endian formats. Note that OutputStream.write(int) only
* writes the least significant 8 bits and ignores the rest.
*/
void putInt8(int i) throws IOException {
r.write(i);
}
void putInt16(int i) throws IOException {
if (r.availableDataBytes() < 2) {
flush();
}
r.write(i >> 8);
r.write(i);
}
void putInt24(int i) throws IOException {
if (r.availableDataBytes() < 3) {
flush();
}
r.write(i >> 16);
r.write(i >> 8);
r.write(i);
}
void putInt32(int i) throws IOException {
if (r.availableDataBytes() < 4) {
flush();
}
r.write(i >> 24);
r.write(i >> 16);
r.write(i >> 8);
r.write(i);
}
/*
* Put byte arrays with length encoded as 8, 16, 24 bit
* integers in big-endian format.
*/
void putBytes8(byte b[]) throws IOException {
if (b == null) {
putInt8(0);
return;
}
putInt8(b.length);
write(b, 0, b.length);
}
void putBytes16(byte b[]) throws IOException {
if (b == null) {
putInt16(0);
return;
}
putInt16(b.length);
write(b, 0, b.length);
}
void putBytes24(byte b[]) throws IOException {
if (b == null) {
putInt24(0);
return;
}
putInt24(b.length);
write(b, 0, b.length);
}
}