Removed the code that striped off the domain name when Curl_gethostname
returned the fully qualified domain name as the function has been
updated to return the un-qualified host name.
Replaced the use of HOSTNAME_MAX as the size of the buffer in the call
to Curl_gethostname with sizeof(host) as this is safer should the buffer
size ever be changed.
Allow (*curl_write_callback) write callbacks to return
CURL_WRITEFUNC_OUT_OF_MEMORY to properly indicate libcurl of OOM conditions
inside the callback itself.
If a socket is larger than FD_SETSIZE, avoid using FD_SET() on the
platforms where this is possible.
Bug: http://curl.haxx.se/bug/view.cgi?id=3413274
Reported by: Tim Starling
To avoid that the progress meter headers get output between each
transfer, make sure the bits gets kept when (re-)inited.
Reported by: Christopher Stone
I think curl should ignore this case and smtp.c should test for this.
Since RFC-2821 seems to allow a "null reverse-path". Ref. "MAIL
FROM:<>" in section 3.7, page 25.
Fixed Curl_gethostname() so that it always returns the un-qualified
machine name rather than being dependent on the socket provider.
Note: The return of getenv("CURL_GETHOSTNAME") is also parsed in case
the developer / test harness provided a fully qualified domain name as
it's value as well.
With this fix, it should work for PolarSSL-1.0.0 (and SVN-1091 trunk)
and retain compatibility with earlier versions. (Tested with 0.14.1)
PolarSSL still doesn't play nicely with curl's CA bundle (we discussed
this before) but I was at least able to retrieve the
https://www.gmail.com/ login page using a modified ca-certificates.crt
file with all 3 versions of PolarSSL.
Renamed the variable from 'proto' to 'level' simply because it is not
protocol you set but level and that is the name of the argument used in
man pages and the POSIX documentation of the setsockopt function.
This workarounds old libssh2 versions not properly initializing
some ssh session variables, which would trigger memory debuggers
warnings on memory being used without having been initialized.
The current version of speedcheck.c may disable timeout by setting zero
to Curl_expire. Which is fine using the curl_multi_perform, because it
recheck all timeout internals, but when using custom event poller (like
hiperfifo.c) it may keep stalle connection forever.