Explain how some FTP servers support the machine readable listing
format MLSD from RFC 3659 and compare it to LIST.
Ref: https://github.com/curl/curl/issues/906
- the expression of an 'if' was always true
- a 'while' contained a condition that was always true
- use 'if(k->exp100 > EXP100_SEND_DATA)' instead of 'if(k->exp100)'
- fixed a typo
Closes#889
... as otherwise we could get a 0 which would count as no error and we'd
wrongly continue and could end up segfaulting.
Bug: https://curl.haxx.se/mail/lib-2016-06/0052.html
Reported-by: 暖和的和暖
The FreeBSD Port security/ca_root_nss installs the Mozilla NSS CA bundle
to /usr/local/share/certs/ca-root-nss.crt. Use this bundle in the
discovery process.
This change also removes the former FreeBSD path that has been obsolete
for 8 years since this FreeBSD ports commit:
https://svnweb.freebsd.org/ports/head/security/?view=revision&revision=215953Closes#894
Prior to this change we called Curl_ssl_getsessionid and
Curl_ssl_addsessionid regardless of whether session ID reusing was
enabled. According to comments that is in case session ID reuse was
disabled but then later enabled.
The old way was not intuitive and probably not something users expected.
When a user disables session ID caching I'd guess they don't expect the
session ID to be cached anyway in case the caching is later enabled.
CMake build now using BUILD_TESTING=ON/OFF (default is OFF) to build
tests and enabling CTest integration. Options BUILD_CURL_TESTS and
BUILD_DASHBOARD_REPORTS was removed.
Closes#882
Reviewed-by: Brad King
Some builds of GCC produce output on both stdout and stderr when --help
--verbose is used. The 2>&1 redirection caused them to be arbitrarily
interleaved with each other because of stream buffering. Consequently,
grep failed to match the fvisibility= string in the mixed output, even
though the string was present in GCC's standard output.
This led to silently disabling symbol hiding in some builds of curl.
The HTTP/2 tests brought with commit bf05606ef1 were using the internal
name 'http2' for the HTTP/2 server, while in fact that name was already
used for the second instance of the HTTP server. This made tests using
the second instance (like test 2050) fail after a HTTP/2 test had run.
The server is now known as HTTP/2 internally and within the <server>
section in test cases. 1700, 1701 and 1702 were updated accordingly.