- Enable protocol family logic for IPv6 resolves even when support
for synthesized addresses is enabled.
This is a follow up to the parent commit that added support for
synthesized IPv6 addresses from IPv4 on iOS/OS X. The protocol family
logic needed for IPv6 was inadvertently excluded if support for
synthesized addresses was enabled.
Bug: https://github.com/curl/curl/issues/863
Ref: https://github.com/curl/curl/pull/866
Ref: https://github.com/curl/curl/pull/867
Use getaddrinfo() to resolve the IPv4 address literal on iOS/Mac OS X.
If the current network interface doesn’t support IPv4, but supports
IPv6, NAT64, and DNS64.
Closes#866Fixes#863
Calling QueryContextAttributes with SECPKG_ATTR_APPLICATION_PROTOCOL
fails on Windows < 8.1 so we need to disable ALPN on these OS versions.
Inspiration provide by: Daniel Seither
Closes#848Fixes#840
- Change the parser to not require a minor version for HTTP/2.
HTTP/2 connection reuse broke when we changed from HTTP/2.0 to HTTP/2
in 8243a95 because the parser still expected a minor version.
Bug: https://github.com/curl/curl/issues/855
Reported-by: Andrew Robbins, Frank Gevaerts
Sessionid cache management is inseparable from managing individual
session lifetimes. E.g. for reference-counted sessions (like those in
SChannel and OpenSSL engines) every session addition and removal
should be accompanied with refcount increment and decrement
respectively. Failing to do so synchronously leads to a race condition
that causes symptoms like use-after-free and memory corruption.
This commit:
- makes existing session cache locking explicit, thus allowing
individual engines to manage lock's scope.
- fixes OpenSSL and SChannel engines by putting refcount management
inside this lock's scope in relevant places.
- adds these explicit locking calls to other engines that use
sessionid cache to accommodate for this change. Note, however,
that it is unknown whether any of these engines could also have
this race.
Bug: https://github.com/curl/curl/issues/815Fixes#815Closes#847
Mostly in order to support broken web sites that redirect to broken URLs
that are accepted by browsers.
Browsers are typically even more leniant than this as the WHATWG URL
spec they should allow an _infinite_ amount. I tested 8000 slashes with
Firefox and it just worked.
Added test case 1141, 1142 and 1143 to verify the new parser.
Closes#791
Regression from the previous *printf() rearrangements, this file missed to
include the correct header to make sure snprintf() works universally.
Reported-by: Moti Avrahami
Bug: https://curl.haxx.se/mail/lib-2016-05/0196.html
While compiling lib/curl_multibyte.c with '-DUSE_WIN32_IDN' etc. I was
getting:
f:\mingw32\src\inet\curl\lib\memdebug.h(38): error C2054: expected '('
to follow 'CURL_EXTERN'
f:\mingw32\src\inet\curl\lib\memdebug.h(38): error C2085:
'curl_domalloc': not in formal parameter list
...as otherwise the TLS libs will skip the CN/SAN check and just allow
connection to any server. curl previously skipped this function when SNI
wasn't used or when connecting to an IP address specified host.
CVE-2016-3739
Bug: https://curl.haxx.se/docs/adv_20160518A.html
Reported-by: Moti Avrahami
CID 1024412: Memory - illegal accesses (OVERRUN). Claimed to happen when
we run over 'workend' but the condition says <= workend and for all I
can see it should be safe. Compensating for the warning by adding a byte
margin in the buffer.
Also, removed the extra brace level indentation in the code and made it
so that 'workend' is only assigned once within the function.
The proper FTP wildcard init is now more properly done in Curl_pretransfer()
and the corresponding cleanup in Curl_close().
The previous place of init/cleanup code made the internal pointer to be NULL
when this feature was used with the multi_socket() API, as it was made within
the curl_multi_perform() function.
Reported-by: Jonathan Cardoso Machado
Fixes#800
Prior to this change a width arg could be erroneously output, and also
width and precision args could not be used together without crashing.
"%0*d%s", 2, 9, "foo"
Before: "092"
After: "09foo"
"%*.*s", 5, 2, "foo"
Before: crash
After: " fo"
Test 557 is updated to verify this and more
The new way of disabling certificate verification doesn't work on
Mountain Lion (OS X 10.8) so we need to use the old way in that version
too. I've tested this solution on versions 10.7.5, 10.8, 10.9, 10.10.2
and 10.11.
Closes#802
curl's representation of HTTP/2 responses involves transforming the
response to a format that is similar to HTTP/1.1. Prior to this change,
curl would do this by separating header names and values with only a
colon, without introducing a space after the colon.
While this is technically a valid way to represent a HTTP/1.1 header
block, it is much more common to see a space following the colon. This
change introduces that space, to ensure that incautious tools are safely
able to parse the header block.
This also ensures that the difference between the HTTP/1.1 and HTTP/2
response layout is as minimal as possible.
Bug: https://github.com/curl/curl/issues/797Closes#798Fixes#797
... introduced in curl-7_48_0-293-g2968c83:
Error: COMPILER_WARNING:
lib/vtls/openssl.c: scope_hint: In function ‘Curl_ossl_check_cxn’
lib/vtls/openssl.c:767:15: warning: conversion to ‘int’ from ‘ssize_t’
may alter its value [-Wconversion]
- In the case of recv error, limit returning 'connection still in place'
to EINPROGRESS, EAGAIN and EWOULDBLOCK.
This is an improvement on the parent commit which changed the openssl
connection check to use recv MSG_PEEK instead of SSL_peek.
Ref: https://github.com/curl/curl/commit/856baf5#comments
Calling SSL_peek can cause bytes to be read from the raw socket which in
turn can upset the select machinery that determines whether there's data
available on the socket.
Since Curl_ossl_check_cxn only tries to determine whether the socket is
alive and doesn't actually need to see the bytes SSL_peek seems like
the wrong function to call.
We're able to occasionally reproduce a connect timeout due to this
bug. What happens is that Curl doesn't know to call SSL_connect again
after the peek happens since data is buffered in the SSL buffer and thus
select won't fire for this socket.
Closes#795
Only protocols that actually have a protocol registered for ALPN and NPN
should try to get that negotiated in the TLS handshake. That is only
HTTPS (well, http/1.1 and http/2) right now. Previously ALPN and NPN
would wrongly be used in all handshakes if libcurl was built with it
enabled.
Reported-by: Jay Satiro
Fixes#789