also affecting NTLM and Negotiate.) It turned out that if the server responded
with 100 Continue before the initial 401 response, libcurl didn't take care of
the response properly. Test case 245 and 246 added to verify this.
functions. This enabled me to add a function that automatically delays between
each byte, to proper test curl's ability to read FTP server responses sent in
many (small) chunks. See also upcoming libcurl fixes...
function was fixed to use the proper proxy authentication when multiple ones
were added as accepted. test 239 and test 243 were added to repeat the
problems and verify the fixes.
on a host with a buggy resolver that strips all but the bottom 8 bits of
each octet. The resolved address in this case (192.0.2.127) is guaranteed
never to belong to a real host (see RFC3330).
file got a Last-Modified: header written to the data stream, corrupting the
actual data. This was because some conditions from the previous FTP code was
not properly brought into the new FTP code. I fixed and I added test case 520
to verify. (This bug was introduced in 7.13.1)
on the remote side. This then converts the operation to an ordinary STOR
upload. This was requested/pointed out by Ignacio Vazquez-Abrams.
It also proved (and I fixed) a bug in the newly rewritten ftp code (and
present in the 7.13.1 release) when trying to resume an upload and the servers
returns an error to the SIZE command. libcurl then loops and sends SIZE
commands infinitely.
requested data from a host and then followed a redirect to another
host. libcurl then didn't use the proxy-auth properly in the second request,
due to the host-only check for original host name wrongly being extended to
the proxy auth as well. Added test case 233 to verify the flaw and that the
fix removed the problem.
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".