For consistency, as we seem to have a bit of a mixed bag, changed all
instances of ipv4 and ipv6 in comments and documentations to use the
correct case.
The variable `$ipvnum` can now contain "unix" besides the integers 4
and 6 since the variable. Functions which receive this parameter
have their `$port` parameter renamed to `$port_or_path` to support a
path to the UNIX domain socket (as a "port" is only meaningful for TCP).
Signed-off-by: Peter Wu <peter@lekensteyn.nl>
Commit curl-7_23_1-143-g8218064 changed the parameter of
responsive_http_server to accept types other than IPv6 (converting
from a boolean to a string), but only considered the lower-case "ipv6"
and not the "IPv6" variant. This caused all servers to start in IPv4
mode instead.
This patch converts the remaining cases to "ipv6". While not strictly
necessary for the run*server variants, these got also converted for
consistency and to prevent future errors.
Signed-off-by: Peter Wu <peter@lekensteyn.nl>
If a non-standard $TESTDIR is used the file may not be necessary.
Previously a "missing" file resulted in the warning:
readline() on closed filehandle D at ./runtests.pl line 4940.
This seems to have become necessary for SRP support to work starting
with GnuTLS ver. 2.99.0. Since support for SRP was added to GnuTLS
before the function that takes this priority string, there should be no
issue with backward compatibility.
Curl_rand() will return a dummy and repatable random value for this
case. Makes it possible to write test cases that verify output.
Also, fake timestamp with CURL_FORCETIME set.
Only when built debug enabled of course.
Curl_ssl_random() was not used anymore so it has been
removed. Curl_rand() is enough.
create_digest_md5_message: generate base64 instead of hex string
curl_sasl: also fix memory leaks in some OOM situations
Since all present tests now have <keywords> listed, this script will now
refuse to run a given test case if no such section is provided.
Hopefully this will help us make sure new test cases get keywords added
at start.
When the protocol part fails, the data usually does too but the protocol
part is often more fundamental and often provide the clues you need to
fix the test case.
To better allow arguments like "1 to 9999" without flooding the terminal
with error messages, the given test cases range is now checked and only
test numbers with existing files are actually run.
This was already mostly being done, except that analysis after the
test still assumed that the valgrind log files would be available. An
alternative way to handle the valgrind + gdb combination could be to
enable one of the valgrind debugger hooks.
It makes more sense to convert the expected output to [CR][LF] on
Windows than to force the actual, probably correct, output to [LF].
This way it is actually possible to see if curl outputs the correct
line-ending excepted by a text-aware test case.
The built-in memory debug system doesn't work with multi-threaded use so
instead of causing annoying false positives, disable the memory tracking
if the threaded resolver is used.
The Windows console version of stunnel is called "tstunnel", while
running "stunnel" on Windows spawns a new console window which
cannot be handled by the testsuite.
Following the addition of informational commands to the SMTP protocol,
the test server is no longer required to return the verified server
information in responses that curl only outputs in verbose mode.
Instead, a similar detection mechanism to that used by FTP, IMAP and
POP3 can now be used.