Add a new type of callback to Curl_handler which performs checks on
the connection. Alter RTSP so that it uses this callback to do its
own check on connection health.
mk-lib1521.pl generates a test program (lib1521.c) that calls
curl_easy_setopt() for every known option with a few typical values to
make sure they work (ignoring the return codes).
Some small changes were necessary to avoid asserts and NULL accesses
when doing this.
The perl script needs to be manually rerun when we add new options.
Closes#1543
... since the total amount is low this is faster, easier and reduces
memory overhead.
Also, Curl_expire_done() can now mark an expire timeout as done so that
it never times out.
Closes#1472
A) reduces the timeout lists drastically
B) prevents a lot of superfluous loops for timers that expires "in vain"
when it has actually already been extended to fire later on
This fixes the following clang warnings:
http2.c:184:27: error: no previous extern declaration for non-static
variable 'Curl_handler_http2' [-Werror,-Wmissing-variable-declarations]
http2.c:204:27: error: no previous extern declaration for non-static
variable 'Curl_handler_http2_ssl'
[-Werror,-Wmissing-variable-declarations]
When removing an easy handler from a multi before it completed its
transfer, and it had pushed streams, it would segfault due to the pushed
counted not being cleared.
Fixed-by: zelinchen@users.noreply.github.comFixes#1249
- In Curl_http2_switched don't call memcpy when src is NULL.
Curl_http2_switched can be called like:
Curl_http2_switched(conn, NULL, 0);
.. and prior to this change memcpy was then called like:
memcpy(dest, NULL, 0)
.. causing address sanitizer to warn:
http2.c:2057:3: runtime error: null pointer passed as argument 2, which
is declared to never be null
... by making sure we don't count down the "upload left" counter when the
uploaded size is unknown and then it can be allowed to continue forever.
Fixes#996
With HTTP/2 each transfer is made in an indivial logical stream over the
connection, making most previous errors that caused the connection to get
forced-closed now instead just kill the stream and not the connection.
Fixes#941
Since the server can at any time send a HTTP/2 frame to us, we need to
wait for the socket to be readable during all transfers so that we can
act on incoming frames even when uploading etc.
Reminded-by: Tatsuhiro Tsujikawa
After a few wasted hours hunting down the reason for slowness during a
TLS handshake that turned out to be because of TCP_NODELAY not being
set, I think we have enough motivation to toggle the default for this
option. We now enable TCP_NODELAY by default and allow applications to
switch it off.
This also makes --tcp-nodelay unnecessary, but --no-tcp-nodelay can be
used to disable it.
Thanks-to: Tim Rühsen
Bug: https://curl.haxx.se/mail/lib-2016-06/0143.html
Previously, passing a timeout of zero to Curl_expire() was a magic code
for clearing all timeouts for the handle. That is now instead made with
the new Curl_expire_clear() function and thus a 0 timeout is fine to set
and will trigger a timeout ASAP.
This will help removing short delays, in particular notable when doing
HTTP/2.
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
curl_printf.h defines printf to curl_mprintf, etc. This can cause
problems with external headers which may use
__attribute__((format(printf, ...))) markers etc.
To avoid that they cause problems with system includes, we include
curl_printf.h after any system headers. That makes the three last
headers to always be, and we keep them in this order:
curl_printf.h
curl_memory.h
memdebug.h
None of them include system headers, they all do funny #defines.
Reported-by: David Benjamin
Fixes#743