Results for: "remove_const"

Sets the lower bound on the supported SSL/TLS protocol version. The version may be specified by an integer constant named OpenSSL::SSL::*_VERSION, a Symbol, or nil which means “any version”.

Be careful that you don’t overwrite OpenSSL::SSL::OP_NO_{SSL,TLS}v* options by options= once you have called min_version= or max_version=.

Example

ctx = OpenSSL::SSL::SSLContext.new
ctx.min_version = OpenSSL::SSL::TLS1_1_VERSION
ctx.max_version = OpenSSL::SSL::TLS1_2_VERSION

sock = OpenSSL::SSL::SSLSocket.new(tcp_sock, ctx)
sock.connect # Initiates a connection using either TLS 1.1 or TLS 1.2

Sets the upper bound of the supported SSL/TLS protocol version. See min_version= for the possible values.

Sets the SSL/TLS protocol version for the context. This forces connections to use only the specified protocol version. This is deprecated and only provided for backwards compatibility. Use min_version= and max_version= instead.

History

As the name hints, this used to call the SSL_CTX_set_ssl_version() function which sets the SSL method used for connections created from the context. As of Ruby/OpenSSL 2.1, this accessor method is implemented to call min_version= and max_version= instead.

A non-blocking version of sysread. Raises an SSLError if reading would block. If “exception: false” is passed, this method returns a symbol of :wait_readable, :wait_writable, or nil, rather than raising an exception.

Reads length bytes from the SSL connection. If a pre-allocated buffer is provided the data will be written into it.

Returns a String representing the SSL/TLS version that was negotiated for the connection, for example “TLSv1.2”.

Returns true if a reused session was negotiated during the handshake.

No documentation available
No documentation available
No documentation available

Content: [ String tag_name, Hash attributes ]

Path of activations from the current list.

No documentation available

Returns the HTTP status description

Ensure argument is ‘number’ or raise DataFormatError

No documentation available
No documentation available

Sets up the resolution process @return [void]

@return [Conflict] a {Conflict} that reflects the failure to activate

the {#possibility} in conjunction with the current {#state}
No documentation available

Ensure argument is ‘mod_sequence_value’ or raise DataFormatError

No documentation available

Check that a method is callable via dRuby.

obj is the object we want to invoke the method on. msg_id is the method name, as a Symbol.

If the method is an insecure method (see insecure_method?) a SecurityError is thrown. If the method is private or undefined, a NameError is thrown.

No documentation available
No documentation available

Opens a message writer stream and gives it to the block. The stream is valid only in the block, and has these methods:

puts(str = ”)

outputs STR and CR LF.

print(str)

outputs STR.

printf(fmt, *args)

outputs sprintf(fmt,*args).

write(str)

outputs STR and returns the length of written bytes.

<<(str)

outputs STR and returns self.

If a single CR (“r”) or LF (“n”) is found in the message, it is converted to the CR LF pair. You cannot send a binary message with this method.

Parameters

from_addr is a String representing the source mail address.

to_addr is a String or Strings or Array of Strings, representing the destination mail address or addresses.

Example

Net::SMTP.start('smtp.example.com', 25) do |smtp|
  smtp.open_message_stream('from@example.com', ['dest@example.com']) do |f|
    f.puts 'From: from@example.com'
    f.puts 'To: dest@example.com'
    f.puts 'Subject: test message'
    f.puts
    f.puts 'This is a test message.'
  end
end

Errors

This method may raise:

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