smb.c:134:3: warning: conversion to 'short unsigned int' from 'int' may
alter its value
smb.c:146:42: warning: conversion to 'unsigned int' from 'long long
unsigned int' may alter its value
smb.c:146:65: warning: conversion to 'unsigned int' from 'long long
unsigned int' may alter its value
pop3-multi.c:96:5: warning: implicit declaration of function 'memset'
imap-multi.c:96:5: warning: implicit declaration of function 'memset'
http2-download.c:226:5: warning: implicit declaration of function 'memset'
http2-upload.c:290:5: warning: implicit declaration of function 'memset'
http2-upload.c:290:5: warning: implicit declaration of function 'memset'
When an option's help string contains literal single quotes, those
single quotes would be stripped from the option's description in the
completion output (unless the zsh RC_QUOTES option were set while the
completion function was being sourced, which is not the default). This
patch makes the completion output contain single quotes where the --help
output does.
Closes#532
The push headers are freed after the push callback has been invoked,
meaning this code should only free the headers if the callback was never
invoked and thus the headers weren't freed at that time.
Reported-by: Davey Shafik
As POP3 final and continuation responses both begin with a + character,
and both the finalcode and contcode variables in SASLprotoc are set as
such, we cannot tell the difference between them when we are expecting
an optional continuation from the server such as the following:
+ something else from the server
+OK final response
Disabled these tests until such a time we can tell the responses apart.
According to RFC7628 a failure message may be sent by the server in a
base64 encoded JSON string as a continuation response.
Currently only implemented for OAUTHBEARER and not XAUTH2.
OAUTHBEARER is now the official "registered" SASL mechanism name for
OAuth 2.0. However, we don't want to drop support for XOAUTH2 as some
servers won't support the new mechanism yet.
They tend to never get updated anyway so they're frequently inaccurate
and we never go back to revisit them anyway. We document issues to work
on properly in KNOWN_BUGS and TODO instead.
The hashes can vary between architectures (e.g. Sparc differs from x86_64).
This is not a fatal problem but just reduces the coverage of these white-box
tests, as the assumptions about into which hash bucket each key falls are no
longer valid.