When a zeroed out allocation is required, use calloc() rather than
malloc() followed by an explicit memset(). The result will be the
same, but using calloc() everywhere increases consistency in the
codebase and avoids the risk of subtle bugs when code is injected
between malloc and memset by accident.
Closes https://github.com/curl/curl/pull/2497
... since the libc provided one are locale dependent in a way we don't
want. Also, the "native" isalnum() (for example) works differently on
different platforms which caused test 1307 failures on macos only.
Closes#2269
... to cater for systems with unsigned time_t variables.
- Renamed the functions to curlx_timediff and Curl_timediff_us.
- Added overflow protection for both of them in either direction for
both 32 bit and 64 bit time_ts
- Reprefixed the curlx_time functions to use Curl_*
Reported-by: Peter Piekarski
Fixes#2004Closes#2005
The stub implementation is pre-loaded using LD_PRELOAD
and emulates common gssapi uses (only builds if curl is
initially built with gssapi support).
The initial tests are currently disabled for debug builds
as LD_PRELOAD is not used then.
Ref: https://github.com/curl/curl/pull/1687
The MSVC warning level defaults to 3 in CMake. Change it to 4, which is
consistent with the Visual Studio and NMake builds. Disable level 4
warning C4127 for the library and additionally C4306 for the test
servers to get a clean CURL_WERROR build as that warning is raised in
some macros in older Visual Studio versions.
Ref: https://github.com/curl/curl/pull/1667#issuecomment-314082794
Closes https://github.com/curl/curl/pull/1711
... to make all libcurl internals able to use the same data types for
the struct members. The timeval struct differs subtly on several
platforms so it makes it cumbersome to use everywhere.
Ref: #1652Closes#1693
MSVC warns that gethostbyname is deprecated. Always use getaddrinfo
instead to fix this when IPv6 is enabled, also for IPv4 resolves. This
is also consistent with what libcurl does.
Closes https://github.com/curl/curl/pull/1682
Older GCC warns:
/tests/server/rtspd.c:1194:10: warning: missing braces around
initializer [-Wmissing-braces]
Fix this by using memset instead of an initializer.
... to enable sending "OPTIONS *" which wasn't possible previously.
This option currently only works for HTTP.
Added test cases 1298 + 1299 to verify
Fixes#1280Closes#1462
... the previous code would reset the header length wrongly (since
5113ad0424). This makes test 1060 reliable again.
Also: make sws send even smaller chunks of data to increase the
likeliness of this happening.
Include the test number in the names of files written out by tests to
reduce the chance of accidental duplication and to make it more clear
which test is associated with which file.
assign string literals to const char * instead of char * in order to
avoid a lot of these warnings:
cast from 'const char *' to 'char *' drops const qualifier
[-Wcast-qual]
This fixes the following clang warning:
getpart.c:201:17: warning: cast from function call of type 'CURLcode'
to non-matching type 'int' [-Wbad-function-cast]
In ancient MinGW versions, in6addr_any was declared as extern, but not
defined. Because of that, 22a0c57746 added
definitions for in6addr_any when compiling with MinGW. The bug was fixed in
w32api version 3.6 from 2006, so this workaround is not needed anymore for
recent versions.
This fixes the following MinGW-w64 warnings because the MinGW-w64 version of
IN6ADDR_ANY_INIT has the two additional braces inside the macro:
util.c:59:14: warning: braces around scalar initializer
util.c:59:40: warning: excess elements in scalar initializer
Ref: e4803e0da2/tree/w32api/ChangeLog
Closes https://github.com/curl/curl/pull/1379
We're mostly saying just "curl" in lower case these days so here's a big
cleanup to adapt to this reality. A few instances are left as the
project could still formally be considered called cURL.
... to make it less likely that we forget that the function actually
does case insentive compares. Also replaced several invokes of the
function with a plain strcmp when case sensitivity is not an issue (like
comparing with "-").