Chilkat HOME .NET Core C# Android™ AutoIt C C# C++ Chilkat2-Python CkPython Classic ASP DataFlex Delphi ActiveX Delphi DLL Go Java Lianja Mono C# Node.js Objective-C PHP ActiveX PHP Extension Perl PowerBuilder PowerShell PureBasic Ruby SQL Server Swift 2 Swift 3,4,5... Tcl Unicode C Unicode C++ VB.NET VBScript Visual Basic 6.0 Visual FoxPro Xojo Plugin
(C++) Socket Convert Existing TCP Connection to SSL/TLSDemonstrates the Chilkat Socket ConvertToSsl method.
#include <CkSocket.h> void ChilkatSample(void) { // This example requires the Chilkat API to have been previously unlocked. // See Global Unlock Sample for sample code. CkSocket sock; // -------------------------------------------------------------------- // This example uses the public TCP/TLS echo service at https://tcpbin.com/ // -------------------------------------------------------------------- // The echo server at tcpbin.com expects to receive TCP connections on port 4242, and TLS connections on port 4243. // We could simply connect to port 4243 using TLS like this. // However, further below, this example shows how to initially make a TCP connection, and then convert the connection to TLS. bool useTls = true; int port = 4243; int maxWaitMs = 5000; bool success = sock.Connect("tcpbin.com",port,useTls,maxWaitMs); if (success == false) { std::cout << sock.lastErrorText() << "\r\n"; return; } // OK, we have a TLS connection. // Note: The server chooses the TLS protocol version. // We can see the version of the TLS connection that was established: std::cout << "TLS version: " << sock.tlsVersion() << "\r\n"; sock.Close(maxWaitMs); // --------------------------------------------------------------------- // Now we'll do the same, except first we connect to port 4243 using TCP, // and then convert the connection to TLS. // // This may seem pointless, and it is for the case w/ this server. However, there could be situations // where you're interacting with a server of some kind where there is a need to convert to/from TLS. // (This is common internal to many protocols, such as SMTP, IMAP, FTP, etc., and it is often called "explicit" SSL/TLS) // Connect again, except this time useTls is false, so we only have a simple TCP connection after this call. useTls = false; success = sock.Connect("tcpbin.com",port,useTls,maxWaitMs); if (success == false) { std::cout << sock.lastErrorText() << "\r\n"; return; } // Convert the existing TCP connection to TLS. // (The method name uses "SSL" because long ago, at the time of initial development, TLS 1.0 did not yet exist.) success = sock.ConvertToSsl(); if (success == false) { std::cout << sock.lastErrorText() << "\r\n"; return; } // OK, we now have a TLS connection. // Again, we can see the TLS version: std::cout << "TLS version: " << sock.tlsVersion() << "\r\n"; sock.Close(maxWaitMs); } |
© 2000-2024 Chilkat Software, Inc. All Rights Reserved.