The recent overhaul of the SSL recv function made this treat a
zero returned from gnutls_record_recv() as an error, and this
caused our HTTPS test cases to fail. We leave it to upper layer
code to detect if an EOF is a problem or not.
On some ancient distributions such as RHEL-3, <gssapi/gssapi_krb5.h> needs
to be processed after <gssapi/gssapi.h>, but does not include it itself.
This patch checks for <gssapi/gssapi.h> first and then includes it
in the test for <gssapi/gssapi_krb5.h>, resolving the problem.
Without the patch, <gssapi/gssapi_krb5.h> is "present but cannot be
compiled".
This code would previously use dns_entry->addr->ai_canonname
instead of the given host name, which caused us grief and
problems since not all our resolver options do the reverse lookup
and I would also guess that it caused problems with KRB5/GSS with
virtual name-based hosts. Now the host name from the URL is used.
As reported in bug report #2987196, the code for ipv6 already did
the setting of this bit correctly so we copied that logic into
the Curl_ipv4_resolve_r() function as well. KRB code is the only
code we know that might need the cannonical name so only resolve
it for such requests!
curl_multi_timeout(3) is simply the wrong function to use
if you're using the multi_socket API and this document now
states this pretty clearly to help guiding users.
I've done this blindly, and the last piece that works with ares
should possibly be done differently now that c-ares isn't a
subtree within the curl tree anymore...
Prefixing the FTP quote commands with an asterisk really only
worked for the postquote actions. This is now fixed and test case
227 has been extended to verify.
Matt Wixson found and fixed a bug in the SCP/SFTP area where the
code treated a 0 return code from libssh2 to be the same as
EAGAIN while in reality it isn't. The problem caused a hang in
SFTP transfers from a MessageWay server.