Provided by: libssl-doc_3.0.8-1ubuntu1_all bug

NAME

       SSL_CTX_sess_set_new_cb, SSL_CTX_sess_set_remove_cb, SSL_CTX_sess_set_get_cb,
       SSL_CTX_sess_get_new_cb, SSL_CTX_sess_get_remove_cb, SSL_CTX_sess_get_get_cb - provide
       callback functions for server side external session caching

SYNOPSIS

        #include <openssl/ssl.h>

        void SSL_CTX_sess_set_new_cb(SSL_CTX *ctx,
                                     int (*new_session_cb)(SSL *, SSL_SESSION *));
        void SSL_CTX_sess_set_remove_cb(SSL_CTX *ctx,
                                        void (*remove_session_cb)(SSL_CTX *ctx,
                                                                  SSL_SESSION *));
        void SSL_CTX_sess_set_get_cb(SSL_CTX *ctx,
                                     SSL_SESSION (*get_session_cb)(SSL *,
                                                                   const unsigned char *,
                                                                   int, int *));

        int (*SSL_CTX_sess_get_new_cb(SSL_CTX *ctx))(struct ssl_st *ssl,
                                                     SSL_SESSION *sess);
        void (*SSL_CTX_sess_get_remove_cb(SSL_CTX *ctx))(struct ssl_ctx_st *ctx,
                                                         SSL_SESSION *sess);
        SSL_SESSION *(*SSL_CTX_sess_get_get_cb(SSL_CTX *ctx))(struct ssl_st *ssl,
                                                              const unsigned char *data,
                                                              int len, int *copy);

DESCRIPTION

       SSL_CTX_sess_set_new_cb() sets the callback function that is called whenever a new session
       was negotiated.

       SSL_CTX_sess_set_remove_cb() sets the callback function that is called whenever a session
       is removed by the SSL engine.  For example, this can occur because a session is considered
       faulty or has become obsolete because of exceeding the timeout value.

       SSL_CTX_sess_set_get_cb() sets the callback function that is called whenever a TLS client
       proposed to resume a session but the session could not be found in the internal session
       cache (see SSL_CTX_set_session_cache_mode(3)).  (TLS server only.)

       SSL_CTX_sess_get_new_cb(), SSL_CTX_sess_get_remove_cb(), and SSL_CTX_sess_get_get_cb()
       retrieve the function pointers set by the corresponding set callback functions. If a
       callback function has not been set, the NULL pointer is returned.

NOTES

       In order to allow external session caching, synchronization with the internal session
       cache is realized via callback functions. Inside these callback functions, session can be
       saved to disk or put into a database using the d2i_SSL_SESSION(3) interface.

       The new_session_cb() is called whenever a new session has been negotiated and session
       caching is enabled (see SSL_CTX_set_session_cache_mode(3)).  The new_session_cb() is
       passed the ssl connection and the nascent ssl session sess.  Since sessions are reference-
       counted objects, the reference count on the session is incremented before the callback, on
       behalf of the application.  If the callback returns 0, the session will be immediately
       removed from the internal cache and the reference count released. If the callback returns
       1, the application retains the reference (for an entry in the application-maintained
       "external session cache"), and is responsible for calling SSL_SESSION_free() when the
       session reference is no longer in use.

       Note that in TLSv1.3, sessions are established after the main handshake has completed. The
       server decides when to send the client the session information and this may occur some
       time after the end of the handshake (or not at all). This means that applications should
       expect the new_session_cb() function to be invoked during the handshake (for <= TLSv1.2)
       or after the handshake (for TLSv1.3). It is also possible in TLSv1.3 for multiple sessions
       to be established with a single connection. In these case the new_session_cb() function
       will be invoked multiple times.

       In TLSv1.3 it is recommended that each SSL_SESSION object is only used for resumption
       once. One way of enforcing that is for applications to call SSL_CTX_remove_session(3)
       after a session has been used.

       The remove_session_cb() is called whenever the SSL engine removes a session from the
       internal cache. This can happen when the session is removed because it is expired or when
       a connection was not shutdown cleanly. It also happens for all sessions in the internal
       session cache when SSL_CTX_free(3) is called. The remove_session_cb() is passed the ctx
       and the ssl session sess. It does not provide any feedback.

       The get_session_cb() is only called on SSL/TLS servers, and is given the session id
       proposed by the client. The get_session_cb() is always called, even when session caching
       was disabled. The get_session_cb() is passed the ssl connection and the session id of
       length length at the memory location data. By setting the parameter copy to 1, the
       callback can require the SSL engine to increment the reference count of the SSL_SESSION
       object; setting copy to 0 causes the reference count to remain unchanged.  If the
       get_session_cb() does not write to copy, the reference count is incremented and the
       session must be explicitly freed with SSL_SESSION_free(3).

RETURN VALUES

       SSL_CTX_sess_get_new_cb(), SSL_CTX_sess_get_remove_cb() and SSL_CTX_sess_get_get_cb()
       return different callback function pointers respectively.

SEE ALSO

       ssl(7), d2i_SSL_SESSION(3), SSL_CTX_set_session_cache_mode(3), SSL_CTX_flush_sessions(3),
       SSL_SESSION_free(3), SSL_CTX_free(3)

COPYRIGHT

       Copyright 2001-2020 The OpenSSL Project Authors. All Rights Reserved.

       Licensed under the Apache License 2.0 (the "License").  You may not use this file except
       in compliance with the License.  You can obtain a copy in the file LICENSE in the source
       distribution or at <https://www.openssl.org/source/license.html>.