level stuff. The FTP server communicates with sockfilt using perl's open2().
This enables easier IPv6 support and hopefully FTP-SSL support in the future.
Added four test cases for FTP-ipv6.
test it outside the test suite. Now we also disable valgrind usage if libcurl
was built shared, as then valgrind is only testing the wrapper-script running
shell which is pointless.
previously didn't detect and report the "Conditional jump or move depends on
uninitialised value(s)" error.
When I fixed this, I caught a few curl bugs with it. And then I had to spend
time to make the test suite IGNORE these errors when OpenSSL is used since it
produce massive amounts of valgrind warnings (but only of the "Conditional..."
kind it seems).
So, if a test that requires SSL is run, it ignores the "Conditional..."
errors, and you'll get a "valgrind PARTIAL" output instead of "valgrind OK".
for diff output get created in the log/ dir and no longer deletes them since
they help in understanding the problem, fixing the test case and fixing curl
problems.
If EPSV, EPRT or LPRT is tried and doesn't work, it will not be retried on
the same server again even if a following request is made using a persistent
connection.
If a second request is made to a server, requesting a file from the same
directory as the previous request operated on, libcurl will no longer make
that long series of CWD commands just to end up on the same spot. Note that
this is only for *exactly* the same dir. There is still room for improvements
to optimize the CWD-sending when the dirs are only slightly different.
Added test 210, 211 and 212 to verify these changes. Had to improve the
test script too and added a new primitive to the test file format.
no fixed port numbers in use anymore. Starting now, the default ports the
servers use are 8990 - 8993. There's no option to modify these yet, but
changing the $base option in the top of the runtests.pl script.
Also made -t imply -n to disable valgrind, it runs sloooow otherwise.
This now manages to run all tests OK up to test case 100 (the first FTP one)
for me.
The -t is the "torture" test that first runs the test and counts the number
of allocations performed during it, then it runs the test repeatedly over and
over again and makes alloc number N fail to verify that we detect and return
properly from error cases everywhere.