Hi Viktor, I am already setting that. socket->ssl_bio = BIO_new(BIO_f_ssl()); if (!(socket->ssl_bio)) { HANDLE_CATASTROPHIC_INIT_ERROR("client-ssl-bio") return; } SSL_set_connect_state(socket->ssl); SSL_set_bio(socket->ssl, socket->inter_bio, socket->inter_bio); BIO_set_ssl(socket->ssl_bio, socket->ssl, BIO_NOCLOSE); On Mon, Oct 10, 2016 at 12:19 PM, Viktor Dukhovni < openssl-users at dukhovni.org> wrote: > > > On Oct 10, 2016, at 2:20 AM, Ajay Garg <ajaygargnsit at gmail.com> wrote: > > > > BIO *inter_bio; // intermediate-bio, have no > idea what it really is used for. > > The internal BIO from BIO_new_bio_pair must be attached to the SSL > handle via: > > SSL_set_bio(ssl, internal_bio, internal_bio); > > When SSL writes ciphertext to the internal bio, you can read that via > the network_bio. When you write to the network_bio, SSL can read the > data via the internal_bio. > > -- > Viktor. > > -- > openssl-users mailing list > To unsubscribe: https://mta.openssl.org/mailman/listinfo/openssl-users > -- Regards, Ajay -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://mta.openssl.org/pipermail/openssl-users/attachments/20161010/cd20d979/attachment.html>