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NAME

HTTP::Daemon::SSL - a simple http server class with SSL support

SYNOPSIS

  use HTTP::Daemon::SSL;
  use HTTP::Status;

  my $d = HTTP::Daemon::SSL->new || die;
  print "Please contact me at: <URL:", $d->url, ">\n";
  while (my $c = $d->accept) {
      while (my $r = $c->get_request) {
          if ($r->method eq 'GET' and $r->url->path eq "/xyzzy") {
              # remember, this is *not* recommened practice :-)
              $c->send_file_response("/etc/passwd");
          } else {
              $c->send_error(RC_FORBIDDEN)
          }
      }
      $c->close;
      undef($c);
  }

DESCRIPTION

Instances of the HTTP::Daemon::SSL class are HTTP/1.1 servers that listen on a socket for incoming requests. The HTTP::Daemon::SSL is a sub-class of IO::Socket::SSL, so you can perform socket operations directly on it too.

The accept() method will return when a connection from a client is available. In a scalar context the returned value will be a reference to a object of the HTTP::Daemon::ClientConn::SSL class which is another IO::Socket::SSL subclass. In a list context a two-element array is returned containing the new HTTP::Daemon::ClientConn::SSL reference and the peer address; the list will be empty upon failure. Calling the get_request() method on the HTTP::Daemon::ClientConn::SSL object will read data from the client and return an HTTP::Request object reference.

This HTTPS daemon does not fork(2) for you. Your application, i.e. the user of the HTTP::Daemon::SSL is reponsible for forking if that is desirable. Also note that the user is responsible for generating responses that conform to the HTTP/1.1 protocol. The HTTP::Daemon::ClientConn class provides some methods that make this easier.

METHODS

The following methods are the only differences from the HTTP::Daemon base class:

$d = new HTTP::Daemon::SSL

The constructor takes the same parameters as the IO::Socket::SSL constructor. It can also be called without specifying any parameters. The daemon will then set up a listen queue of 5 connections and allocate some random port number. A server that wants to bind to some specific address on the standard HTTPS port will be constructed like this:

  $d = new HTTP::Daemon::SSL
        LocalAddr => 'www.someplace.com',
        LocalPort => 443;

SEE ALSO

RFC 2068

IO::Socket::SSL, HTTP::Daemon, Apache

COPYRIGHT

Code and documentation from HTTP::Daemon Copyright 1996-2001, Gisle Aas Changes Copyright 2003, Peter Behroozi

This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.

1 POD Error

The following errors were encountered while parsing the POD:

Around line 163:

You forgot a '=back' before '=head1'