By making the `magic` identifier the same size and at the same place
within the structs (easy, multi, share), libcurl will be able to more
reliably detect and safely error out if an application passes in the
wrong handle to APIs. Easier to detect and less likely to cause crashes
if done.
Such mixups can't be detected at compile-time due to them being
typedefed void pointers - unless `CURL_STRICTER` is defined.
Closes#6484
... in most cases instead of 'struct connectdata *' but in some cases in
addition to.
- We mostly operate on transfers and not connections.
- We need the transfer handle to log, store data and more. Everything in
libcurl is driven by a transfer (the CURL * in the public API).
- This work clarifies and separates the transfers from the connections
better.
- We should avoid "conn->data". Since individual connections can be used
by many transfers when multiplexing, making sure that conn->data
points to the current and correct transfer at all times is difficult
and has been notoriously error-prone over the years. The goal is to
ultimately remove the conn->data pointer for this reason.
Closes#6425
... instead of at end of the DO state. This makes the timer more
accurate for the protocols that use the DOING state (such as FTP), and
simplifies how the function (now called init_perform) is called.
The timer will then include the entire procedure up to PERFORM -
including all instructions for getting the transfer started.
Closes#6454
When doing HTTP authentication and a port number set with CURLOPT_PORT,
the code would previously have the URL's port number override as if it
had been a redirect to an absolute URL.
Added test 1568 to verify.
Reported-by: UrsusArctos on github
Fixes#6397Closes#6400
When failing in TOOFAST, the multi_done() wasn't called so the same
cleanup and handling wasn't done like when it fails in PERFORM, which in
the case of FTP could mean that the control connection wouldn't be
marked as "dead" for the CURLE_ABORTED_BY_CALLBACK case. Which caused
ftp_disconnect() to use it to send "QUIT", which could end up waiting
for a response a long time before giving up!
Reported-by: Tomas Berger
Fixes#6333Closes#6337
This reverts commit d2a7d7c185.
This commit also reverts the subsequent follow-ups to that commit, which
were all done within windows #ifdefs that are removed in this
change. Marc helped me verify this.
Fixes#6146Closes#6281
Also skip pre-checking sockets to set timeout_ms to 0
after the first socket has been detected to be ready.
Reviewed-by: rcombs on github
Reviewed-by: Daniel Stenberg
Follow up to #5886
Since the struct is quite large (1 long and 10 ints) we
declare it once at the beginning of the function instead
of multiple times inside loops to avoid stack movements.
Reviewed-by: Viktor Szakats
Reviewed-by: Daniel Stenberg
Closes#5886
Learn from the way Cygwin handles and maps the WinSock events
to simulate correct and complete poll and select behaviour
according to Richard W. Stevens Network Programming book.
Reviewed-by: Jay Satiro
Reviewed-by: Marcel Raad
Follow up to #5634Closes#5867
Setting a timeout to INT_MAX could cause an immediate error to get
returned as timeout because of an overflow when different values of
'now' were used.
This is primarily fixed by having Curl_pgrsTime() return the "now" when
TIMER_STARTSINGLE is set so that the parent function will continue using
that time.
Reported-by: Ionuț-Francisc Oancea
Fixes#5583Closes#5847
Check readiness of all sockets before waiting on them
to avoid locking in case the one-time event FD_WRITE
was already consumed by a previous wait operation.
More information about WinSock network events:
https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/win32/api/
winsock2/nf-winsock2-wsaeventselect#return-value
Closes#5634
This avoids using a pair of TCP ports to provide wakeup functionality
for every multi instance on Windows, where socketpair() is emulated
using a TCP socket on loopback which could in turn lead to socket
resource exhaustion.
A previous version of this patch failed to account for how in WinSock,
FD_WRITE is set only once when writing becomes possible and not again
until after a send has failed due to the buffer filling. This contrasts
to how FD_READ and FD_OOB continue to be set until the conditions they
refer to no longer apply. This meant that if a user wrote some data to
a socket, but not enough data to completely fill its send buffer, then
waited on that socket to become writable, we'd erroneously stall until
their configured timeout rather than returning immediately.
This version of the patch addresses that issue by checking each socket
we're waiting on to become writable with select() before the wait, and
zeroing the timeout if it's already writable.
Assisted-by: Marc Hörsken
Reviewed-by: Marcel Raad
Reviewed-by: Daniel Stenberg
Tested-by: Gergely Nagy
Tested-by: Rasmus Melchior Jacobsen
Tested-by: Tomas Berger
Replaces #5397
Reverts #5632Closes#5634
Previously any connect-only connections in a multi handle would be kept
alive until the multi handle was closed. Since these connections cannot
be re-used, they can be marked for closure when the associated easy
handle is removed from the multi handle.
Closes#5749
Follow-up to c4e6968127
When a new transfer is created, as a resuly of an acknowledged push,
that transfer needs a download buffer allocated.
Closes#5590
This avoids using a pair of TCP ports to provide wakeup functionality
for every multi instance on Windows, where socketpair() is emulated
using a TCP socket on loopback which could in turn lead to socket
resource exhaustion.
Reviewed-by: Gergely Nagy
Reviewed-by: Marc Hörsken
Closes#5397
Now that all functions in select.[ch] take timediff_t instead
of the limited int or long, we can remove type conversions
and related preprocessor checks to silence compiler warnings.
Avoiding conversions from time_t was already done in 842f73de.
Based upon #5262
Supersedes #5214, #5220 and #5221
Follow up to #5343 and #5479Closes#5490
... and free it as soon as the transfer is done. It removes the extra
alloc when a new size is set with setopt() and reduces memory for unused
easy handles.
In addition: the closure_handle now doesn't use an allocated buffer at
all but the smallest supported size as a stack based one.
Closes#5472
A common set of functions instead of many separate implementations for
creating buffers that can grow when appending data to them. Existing
functionality has been ported over.
In my early basic testing, the total number of allocations seem at
roughly the same amount as before, possibly a few less.
See docs/DYNBUF.md for a description of the API.
Closes#5300
More connection cache accesses are protected by locks.
CONNCACHE_* is a beter prefix for the connection cache lock macros.
Curl_attach_connnection: now called as soon as there's a connection
struct available and before the connection is added to the connection
cache.
Curl_disconnect: now assumes that the connection is already removed from
the connection cache.
Ref: #4915Closes#5009
- If an easy handle is owned by a multi different from the one specified
then return CURLM_BAD_EASY_HANDLE.
Prior to this change I assume user error could cause corruption.
Closes https://github.com/curl/curl/pull/5116
- Don't check errno on wakeup socket if sread returned 0 since sread
doesn't set errno in that case.
This is a follow-up to cf7760a from several days ago which fixed
Curl_multi_wait to stop busy looping sread on the non-blocking wakeup
socket if it was closed (ie sread returns 0). Due to a logic error it
was still possible to busy loop in that case if errno == EINTR.
Closes https://github.com/curl/curl/pull/5047
- Do not say that conn->data is "cleared" by multi_done().
If the connection is in use then multi_done assigns another easy handle
still using the connection to conn->data, therefore in that case it is
not cleared.
Closes https://github.com/curl/curl/pull/4901
... since the current transfer is being killed. Setting to NULL is
wrong, leaving it pointing to 'data' is wrong since that handle might be
about to get freed.
Fixes#4845Closes#4858
Reported-by: dmitrmax on github
Previously it was stored in a global state which contributed to
curl_global_init's thread unsafety. This boolean is now instead figured
out in curl_multi_init() and stored in the multi handle. Less effective,
but thread safe.
Closes#4851
A regression made the code use 'multiplexed' as a boolean instead of the
counter it is intended to be. This made curl try to "over-populate"
connections with new streams.
This regression came with 41fcdf71a1, shipped in curl 7.65.0.
Also, respect the CURLMOPT_MAX_CONCURRENT_STREAMS value in the same
check.
Reported-by: Kunal Ekawde
Fixes#4779Closes#4784