From: Yann L. <as...@la...> - 2012-08-22 20:51:32
|
On 08/22/2012 10:44 PM, ex...@tw... wrote: > On 07:13 pm, as...@la... wrote: >> Hi, >> >> I'm having problems closing a OpenSSL.SSL.Conection. > > Hi Yann, > > Perhaps you can explain your goals in a little more detail. "Shutdown" > unfortunately has several possible meanings in the context of an SSL > connection. > > It could mean you want to perform an orderly SSL protocol shutdown. > There are two variations of this. You might want to do so without > shutting down the underlying (TCP?) connection. Or you might want to > shut down that underlying connection. > > Or it could just mean you want to close the connection, either in an > orderly fashion or otherwise (people tend to be sloppy about closing SSL > connections, particularly when using SSL for HTTPS). > > Shutdown and close are also distinct operations when it comes to the > underlying TCP connection. You might want to actually close the > underlying TCP connection, rather than just shutting it down. > > So, are any of those close to what you want to do? Please elaborate, > perhaps providing a short, self-contained, complete (minimal) example in > doing so (<http://sscce.org/>). > > Also, I have copied the Launchpad user list on this reply, as I would > consider it a great boon if pyOpenSSL eventually completely moved off of > sourceforge, including no longer using the sourceforge hosted mailing > list service. Hi, Thanks for your reply. What I want to do is to completly close the socket. My application opens a socket, transfer things, and once finished I want to close the socket. From what I understand I'm supposed to call shutdown() then close() but that doesn't work for me :/ It's hard for me to provide a small example, because haveing non-blocking sockets isn't donein 2 lines :/ -- Yann |