The HTTP/2 tests brought with commit bf05606ef1 were using the internal
name 'http2' for the HTTP/2 server, while in fact that name was already
used for the second instance of the HTTP server. This made tests using
the second instance (like test 2050) fail after a HTTP/2 test had run.
The server is now known as HTTP/2 internally and within the <server>
section in test cases. 1700, 1701 and 1702 were updated accordingly.
It requires that 'nghttpx' is in the PATH, and it will run the tests
using nghttpx as a front-end proxy in front of the standard HTTP/1 test
server. This uses HTTP/2 over plain TCP.
If you like me have nghttpx installed in a custom path, you can run test 1700
like this:
$ PATH=$PATH:$HOME/build-nghttp2/bin/ ./runtests.pl 1700
- no point in repeating curl features that is already listed as features
from the curl -V output
- remove the port numbers/unix domain path from the output unless
verbose is used, as that is rarely interesting to users.
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.
Following changes to ftpserver.pl fixed the mail from address to be a
correctly formatted address otherwise the server response will be 501
Invalid address.
The specified curl binary will then be used to verify the running
server(s) instead of the development version. This is very useful in
some cases when the development version fails to verify correctly as
then the test case may not run at all.
The actual test will still be run with the "normal" curl executable
(unless the test case specifies something differently).
This function is meant to work *exactly* as curl_easy_perform() but will
use the event-based libcurl API internally instead of
curl_multi_perform(). To avoid relying on an actual event-based library
and to not use non-portable functions (like epoll or similar), there's a
rather inefficient emulation layer implemented on top of Curl_poll()
instead.
There's currently some convenience logging done in curl_easy_perform_ev
which helps when tracking down problems. They may be suitable to remove
or change once things seem to be fine enough.
curl has a new --test-event option when built with debug enabled that
then uses curl_easy_perform_ev() instead of curl_easy_perform(). If
built without debug, using --test-event will only output a warning
message.
NOTE: curl_easy_perform_ev() is not part if the public API on purpose.
It is only present in debug builds of libcurl and MUST NOT be considered
stable even then. Use it for libcurl-testing purposes only.
runtests.pl now features an -e command line option that makes it use
--test-event for all curl command line tests. The man page is updated.
These verfy that the 'memory tracking' subsystem is actually doing its
job when using curl tool (#96), a test in libtest (#558) and also a unit
test (#1330), in order to prevent regressions in this functionallity.
Introducing a number of options to the multi interface that
allows for multiple pipelines to the same host, in order to
optimize the balance between the penalty for opening new
connections and the potential pipelining latency.
Two new options for limiting the number of connections:
CURLMOPT_MAX_HOST_CONNECTIONS - Limits the number of running connections
to the same host. When adding a handle that exceeds this limit,
that handle will be put in a pending state until another handle is
finished, so we can reuse the connection.
CURLMOPT_MAX_TOTAL_CONNECTIONS - Limits the number of connections in total.
When adding a handle that exceeds this limit,
that handle will be put in a pending state until another handle is
finished. The free connection will then be reused, if possible, or
closed if the pending handle can't reuse it.
Several new options for pipelining:
CURLMOPT_MAX_PIPELINE_LENGTH - Limits the pipeling length. If a
pipeline is "full" when a connection is to be reused, a new connection
will be opened if the CURLMOPT_MAX_xxx_CONNECTIONS limits allow it.
If not, the handle will be put in a pending state until a connection is
ready (either free or a pipe got shorter).
CURLMOPT_CONTENT_LENGTH_PENALTY_SIZE - A pipelined connection will not
be reused if it is currently processing a transfer with a content
length that is larger than this.
CURLMOPT_CHUNK_LENGTH_PENALTY_SIZE - A pipelined connection will not
be reused if it is currently processing a chunk larger than this.
CURLMOPT_PIPELINING_SITE_BL - A blacklist of hosts that don't allow
pipelining.
CURLMOPT_PIPELINING_SERVER_BL - A blacklist of server types that don't allow
pipelining.
See the curl_multi_setopt() man page for details.
Remove internal separated behavior of the easy vs multi intercace.
curl_easy_perform() is now using the multi interface itself.
Several minor multi interface quirks and bugs have been fixed in the
process.
Much help with debugging this has been provided by: Yang Tse
lib/objnames.inc provides definition of curl_10char_object_name() shell
function. The intended purpose of this function is to transliterate a
(*.c) source file name that may be longer than 10 characters, or not,
into a string with at most 10 characters which may be used as an OS/400
object name.
Test case 1221 does unit testng of this function and also verifies
that it is possible to generate distinct short object names for all
curl and libcurl *.c source file names.
lib/objnames-test.sh is the shell script used for test case 1221.
tests/runtests.pl modified to accept shell script test cases.
More details inside lib/objnames.inc and lib/objnames-test.sh
runtests.pl -am now uses the "PASS/FAIL: [desc]" output for each
executed test. You can run 'make test-am' in the root build directory to
invoke that. The reason for this output style is to better allow generic
test suite parsers to also grok our test output.
The test Makefile now also tests that perl was indeed found and that the
PERL variable points to an executable before it tries to run the main
test perl script runtests.pl,
Replaced the Windows real path from mount hack with a more
reliable and simpler hack: the MSYS shell has a builtin pwd
which understands a -W option which does convertion to Windows
paths. Tested and confirmed that this works on all MSYS versions
I have back to a 3 year old one.
When a <file> part is now specified with no contents at all, this
will actually verify that the specified file has no contents at all.
Previously file contents would be ignored.
This is done introducing tags <file1> to <file4> besides existing <file> one,
as well as corresponding <stripfile1> to <stripfile4> ones, that can be used
in the <verify> section in the same way as the non-numbered ones.
Don't set the "has_openssl" variable if yassl or polarssl is found as
they will simply not work as 100% drop-in replacements for some of the
stuff the "OpenSSL" feature is used for.
I spotted this problem when doing test runs with PolarSSL builds.
There's a new 'http-proxy' server for tests that runs on a separate port
and lets clients do HTTP CONNECT to other ports on the same host to
allow us to test HTTP "tunneling" properly.
Test cases now have a <proxy> section in <verify> to check that the
proxy protocol part matches correctly.
Test case 80, 83, 95, 275, 503 and 1078 have been converted. Test 1316
was added.