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NEON(3)                 neon API reference                NEON(3)



NAME
       neon - HTTP and WebDAV client library

DESCRIPTION
       neon is an HTTP and WebDAV client library. The major
       abstractions exposed are the HTTP session, created by
       ne_session_create; and the HTTP request, created by
       ne_request_create. HTTP authentication is handled
       transparently for server and proxy servers, see
       ne_set_server_auth; complete SSL/TLS support is also
       included, see ne_ssl_set_verify.

CONVENTIONS
       Some conventions are used throughout the neon API, to
       provide a consistent and simple interface; these are
       documented below.

   Thread-safeness and global initialization
       neon itself is implemented to be thread-safe (avoiding any
       use of global state), but relies on the operating system
       providing a thread-safe resolver interface. Modern
       operating systems offer the thread-safe getaddrinfo
       interface, which neon supports; some others implement
       gethostbyname using thread-local storage.

       To allow thread-safe use of SSL in the OpenSSL and GnuTLS
       libraries neon must be configured using the
       --enable-threadsafe-ssl; if this is done, locking
       callbacks will be registered by ne_sock_init; note that
       care must be exercised if neon is used in conjunction with
       another library which uses OpenSSL or GnuTLS.

       Some platforms and libraries used by neon require global
       initialization before use; notably:

       o   The SIGPIPE signal disposition must be set to ignored
           or otherwise handled to avoid process termination when
           writing to a socket which has been shutdown by the
           peer.

       o   OpenSSL and GnuTLSrequire global initialization to
           load shared lookup tables.

       o   The Win32 socket library requires initialization
           before use.

       The ne_sock_init function should be called before any
       other use of neon to perform any necessary initialization
       needed for the particular platform. Applications wishing
       to perform all the necessary process-global initialization
       steps themselves may omit to call ne_sock_init (and
       ne_sock_exit); neon neither checks whether these functions
       are called nor calls them itself.

       For some applications and configurations it may be
       necessary to call ne_i18n_init to initialize the support
       for internationalization in neon.

   Functions using global state
       Any function call in neon may modify the errno global
       variable as a side-effect. Except where explicitly
       documented, the value of errno is unspecified after any
       neon function call.

       Other than in the use of errno, the only functions which
       use or modify process-global state in neon are as follows:

       o   ne_sock_init, ne_i18n_init, and ne_sock_exit, as
           described above

       o   ne_debug_init and ne_debug, if enabled at compile
           time; for debugging output

       o   ne_oom_callback for installing a process-global
           callback to be invoked on malloc failure

   Namespaces
       To avoid possible collisions between names used for
       symbols and preprocessor macros by an application and the
       libraries it uses, it is good practice for each library to
       reserve a particular namespace prefix. An application
       which ensures it uses no names with these prefixes is then
       guaranteed to avoid such collisions.

       The neon library reserves the use of the namespace
       prefixes ne_ and NE_. The libraries used by neon may also
       reserve certain namespaces; collisions between these
       libraries and a neon-based application will not be
       detected at compile time, since the underlying library
       interfaces are not exposed through the neon header files.
       Such collisions can only be detected at link time, when
       the linker attempts to resolve symbols. The following list
       documents some of the namespaces claimed by libraries used
       by neon; this list may be incomplete.

       SSL, ssl, TLS, tls, ERR_, BIO_, d2i_, i2d_, ASN1_
           Some of the many prefixes used by the OpenSSL library;
           little attempt has been made to keep exported symbols
           within any particular prefixes for this library.

       gnutls_, gcry_, gpg_
           Namespaces used by the GnuTLS library (and
           dependencies thereof)

       XML_, Xml[A-Z]
           Namespaces used by the expat library.

       xml[A-Z], html[A-Z], docb[A-Z]
           Namespaces used by the libxml2 library; a relatively
           small number of symbols are used without these
           prefixes.

       inflate, deflate, crc32, compress, uncompres, adler32,
       zlib
           Namespaces used by the zlib library; a relatively
           small number of symbols are used without these
           prefixes.

       krb5, gss, GSS, asn1, decode_krb5, encode_krb5, profile,
       mit
           Some of the prefixes used by the MIT GSSAPI library
           and dependencies thereof; a number of symbols lie
           outside these prefixes.

   Argument validation
       neon does not attempt to validate that the parameters
       passed to functions conform to the API (for instance,
       checking that pointer arguments are not NULL). Any use of
       the neon API which is not documented to produce a certain
       behaviour results is said to produce undefined behaviour;
       it is likely that neon will segfault under these
       conditions.

   URI paths, WebDAV metadata
       The path strings passed to any function must be
       URI-encoded by the application; neon never performs any
       URI encoding or decoding internally. WebDAV property names
       and values must be valid UTF-8 encoded Unicode strings.

   User interaction
       As a pure library interface, neon will never produce
       output on stdout or stderr; all user interaction is the
       responsibilty of the application.

   Memory handling
       neon does not attempt to cope gracefully with an
       out-of-memory situation; instead, by default, the abort
       function is called to immediately terminate the process.
       An application may register a custom function which will
       be called before abort in such a situation; see
       ne_oom_callback.

   Callbacks and userdata
       Whenever a callback is registered, a userdata pointer is
       also used to allow the application to associate a context
       with the callback. The userdata is of type void *,
       allowing any pointer to be used.

   Large File Support
       Since version 0.27.0, neon transparently uses the "LFS
       transitional" interfaces in places where file-backed file
       descriptors are manipulated. This means files larger than
       2GiB can be handled on platforms with a native 32-bit
       off_t type, where LFS support is available.

       Some interfaces use the ne_off_t type, which is defined to
       be either off_t or off64_t according to whether LFS
       support is detected at build time. neon does not use or
       require the -D_FILE_OFFSET_BITS=64 macro definition.

SEE ALSO
       ne_session_create(3), ne_oom_callback

AUTHOR
       Joe Orton 
           Author.

COPYRIGHT
neon 0.28.2                3 April 2008                   NEON(3)

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