or at least L<SSL_set_shutdown(3)|SSL_set_shutdown(3)> was used to
set the SSL_SENT_SHUTDOWN state.
+If a session was closed cleanly, the session object will be kept and all
+settings corresponding. This explicitly means, that e.g. the special method
+used during the session will be kept for the next handshake. So if the
+session was a TLSv1 session, a SSL client object will use a TLSv1 client
+method for the next handshake and a SSL server object will use a TLSv1
+server method, even if SSLv23_*_methods were chosen on startup. This
+will might lead to connection failures (see L<SSL_new(3)|SSL_new(3)>)
+for a description of the method's properties.
+
+=head1 WARNINGS
+
+SSL_clear() resets the SSL object to allow for another connection. The
+reset operation however keeps several settings of the last sessions
+(some of these settings were made automatically during the last
+handshake). It only makes sense for a new connection with the exact
+same peer that shares these settings, and may fail if that peer
+changes its settings between connections. Use the sequence
+L<SSL_get_session(3)|SSL_get_session(3)>;
+L<SSL_new(3)|SSL_new(3)>;
+L<SSL_set_session(3)|SSL_set_session(3)>;
+L<SSL_free(3)|SSL_free(3)>
+instead to avoid such failures
+(or simply L<SSL_free(3)|SSL_free(3)>; L<SSL_new(3)|SSL_new(3)>
+if session reuse is not desired).
+
=head1 RETURN VALUES
The following return values can occur: