For HTTP/2, we may read up everything including responde body with
header fields in Curl_http_readwrite_headers. If no content-length is
provided, curl waits for the connection close, which we emulate it
using conn->proto.httpc.closed = TRUE. The thing is if we read
everything, then http2_recv won't be called and we cannot signal the
HTTP/2 stream has closed. As a workaround, we return nonzero from
data_pending to call http2_recv.
Original commit message was:
Don't omit CN verification in SChannel when an IP address is used.
Side-effect of this change:
SChannel and CryptoAPI do not support the iPAddress subjectAltName
according to RFC 2818. If present, SChannel will first compare the
IP address to the dNSName subjectAltNames and then fallback to the
most specific Common Name in the Subject field of the certificate.
This means that after this change curl will not connect to SSL/TLS
hosts as long as the IP address is not specified in the SAN or CN
of the server certificate or the verifyhost option is disabled.
This patch enables HTTP POST/PUT in HTTP2.
We disabled Expect header field and chunked transfer encoding
since HTTP2 forbids them.
In HTTP1, Curl sends small upload data with request headers, but
HTTP2 requires upload data must be in DATA frame separately.
So we added some conditionals to achieve this.
Perform more work in between sleeps. This is work around the
fact that axtls does not expose any knowledge about when work needs
to be performed. Depending on connection and how often perform is
being called this can save ~25% of time on SSL handshakes (measured
on 20ms latency connection calling perform roughly every 10ms).
When allowing NTLM, the re-use connection logic was too focused on
finding an existing NTLM connection to use and didn't properly allow
re-use of other ones. This made the logic not re-use perfectly re-usable
connections.
Added test case 1418 and 1419 to verify.
Regression brought in 8ae35102c (curl 7.35.0)
Reported-by: Jeff King
Bug: http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.comp.version-control.git/242213
For a function that returns a decoded version of a string, it seems
really strange to allow a NULL pointer to get passed in which then
prevents the decoded data from being returned!
This functionality was not documented anywhere either.
If anyone would use it that way, that memory would've been leaked.
Bug: https://github.com/bagder/curl/pull/90
Reported-by: Arvid Norberg
Make sure that the special NTLM magic we do is for HTTP+NTLM only since
that's where the authenticated connection is a weird non-standard
paradigm.
Regression brought in 8ae35102c (curl 7.35.0)
Bug: http://curl.haxx.se/mail/lib-2014-02/0100.html
Reported-by: Dan Fandrich
The code didn't properly check the return codes to detect overflows so
it could trigger incorrectly. Like on mingw32.
Regression introduced in 345891edba (curl 7.35.0)
Bug: http://curl.haxx.se/mail/lib-2014-02/0097.html
Reported-by: LM
when using --http2 one can now selectively disable NPN or ALPN with
--no-alpn and --no-npn. for now honored with NSS only.
TODO: honor this option with GnuTLS and OpenSSL
SSL_ENABLE_ALPN can be used for preprocessor ALPN feature detection,
but not SSL_NEXT_PROTO_SELECTED, since it is an enum value and not a
preprocessor macro.
Not comma, which is an inconsistency and a mistake probably inherited
from the examples section of RFC1867.
This bug has been present since the day curl started to support
multipart formposts, back in the 90s.
Reported-by: Rob Davies
Bug: http://curl.haxx.se/bug/view.cgi?id=1333
When using the multi socket interface, libcurl calls the
curl_multi_timer_callback asking to be woken up after
CURL_TIMEOUT_EXPECT_100 milliseconds.
After the timeout has expired, calling curl_multi_socket_action with
CURL_SOCKET_TIMEOUT as sockfd leads libcurl to check expired
timeouts. When handling the 100-continue one, the following check in
Curl_readwrite() fails if exactly CURL_TIMEOUT_EXPECT_100 milliseconds
passed since the timeout has been set!
It seems logical to consider that having waited for exactly
CURL_TIMEOUT_EXPECT_100 ms is enough.
Bug: http://curl.haxx.se/bug/view.cgi?id=1334
A server might respond with a content-encoding header and a response
that was encoded accordingly in HTTP-draft-09/2.0 mode, even if the
client did not send an accept-encoding header earlier. The server might
not send a content-encoding header if the identity encoding was used to
encode the response.
See:
http://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-ietf-httpbis-http2-09#section-9.3
This patch chooses different approach to integrate HTTP2 into HTTP curl
stack. The idea is that we insert HTTP2 layer between HTTP code and
socket(TLS) layer. When HTTP2 is initialized (either in NPN or Upgrade),
we replace the Curl_recv/Curl_send callbacks with HTTP2's, but keep the
original callbacks in http_conn struct. When sending serialized data by
nghttp2, we use original Curl_send callback. Likewise, when reading data
from network, we use original Curl_recv callback. In this way we can
treat both TLS and non-TLS connections.
With this patch, one can transfer contents from https://twitter.com and
from nghttp2 test server in plain HTTP as well.
The code still has rough edges. The notable one is I could not figure
out how to call nghttp2_session_send() when underlying socket is
writable.