(http://curl.haxx.se/bug/view.cgi?id=2891595) which identified how an entry
in the DNS cache would linger too long if the request that added it was in
use that long. He also provided the patch that now makes libcurl capable of
still doing a request while the DNS hash entry may get timed out.
used during the FTP connection phase (after the actual TCP connect), while
it of course should be. I also made the speed check get called correctly so
that really slow servers will trigger that properly too.
c-ares libraries in debug and release flavours.
Additionally each of the three sample programs is built against
each of the four possible c-ares libraries, generating all this
a total number of 12 executables and 4 libraries.
wrong percentage for small files, most notable for <1000 bytes and could
easily end up showing more than 100% at the end. It also didn't show any
percentage, transfer size or estimated transfer times when transferring
less than 100 bytes.
moved to 7.19.8. I removed the bugs already in KNOWN_BUGS (but they should
of course still get fixed).
Added three recent bugs. 7.19.8 is targetted to get shipped in Janurary 2010
c-ares with --enable-curldebug uses memdebug.h from libcurl's lib subdirectory.
memdebug.h needs access to libcurl's setup.h from libcurl's lib subdirectory
and also needs access to libcurl's generated curl_config.h
--enable-symbol-hiding and --disable-symbol-hiding as well as related
macro names and some internal variables used for them.
Related configuration file preprocessor symbols named to
CARES_SYMBOL_HIDING and CARES_SYMBOL_SCOPE_EXTERN.
auth is used, as it caused a crash. I failed to repeat the issue, but still
made a change that now forces the TCP connection used for a freed SCP
session to get closed and not be re-used.
POST using a read callback, with Digest authentication and
"Transfer-Encoding: chunked" enforced. I would then cause the first request
to be wrongly sent and then basically hang until the server closed the
connection. I fixed the problem and added test case 565 to verify it.
shows that this one is actually a modified copy of ares_parse_a_reply.c.
In order to comply with ares_parse_a_reply.c's M.I.T. license, the old
1998 M.I.T. copyright notice is now also preserved in this file the same
as it is done in other ares_parse_*.c files.