- During the end-of-headers response phase do not mark the tunnel
complete unless the response body was completely parsed/ignored.
Prior to this change if the entirety of a CONNECT response with chunked
encoding was not received by the time the final header was parsed then
the connection would be marked done prematurely, before all the chunked
data could be read in and ignored (since this is what we do with any
CONNECT response body) and the connection could not be used.
Bug: https://curl.se/mail/lib-2021-01/0033.html
Reported-by: Fabian Keil
Closes https://github.com/curl/curl/pull/6432
When doing a request with a request body expecting a 401/407 back, that
initial request is sent with a zero content-length. Test 177 and more.
Closes#6424
... so that Retry-After and other meta-content can still be used.
Added 1634 to verify. Adjusted test 194 and 281 since --fail now also
includes the header-terminating CRLF in the output before it exits.
Fixes#6408Closes#6409
... to make build tools/valgrind warn if no curl_global_cleanup is
called.
This is conditionally only done for debug builds with the env variable
CURL_GLOBAL_INIT set.
Closes#6410
... and not in the connection setup, as for multiplexed transfers the
connection setup might be skipped and then the transfer would end up
without the set user-agent!
Reported-by: Flameborn on github
Assisted-by: Andrey Gursky
Assisted-by: Jay Satiro
Assisted-by: Mike Gelfand
Fixes#6312Closes#6417
The wolfSSL TLS library defines NO_OLD_TLS in some of their build
configurations and that causes the library to be built without TLS 1.1.
For example if MD5 is explicitly disabled when building wolfSSL then
that defines NO_OLD_TLS and the library is built without TLS 1.1 [1].
Prior to this change attempting to build curl with a wolfSSL that was
built with NO_OLD_TLS would cause a build link error undefined reference
to wolfTLSv1_client_method.
[1]: https://github.com/wolfSSL/wolfssl/blob/v4.5.0-stable/configure.ac#L2366
Bug: https://curl.se/mail/lib-2020-12/0121.html
Reported-by: Julian Montes
Closes https://github.com/curl/curl/pull/6388
When doing HTTP authentication and a port number set with CURLOPT_PORT,
the code would previously have the URL's port number override as if it
had been a redirect to an absolute URL.
Added test 1568 to verify.
Reported-by: UrsusArctos on github
Fixes#6397Closes#6400
We currently use both spellings the british "behaviour" and the american
"behavior". However "behavior" is more used in the project so I think
it's worth dropping the british name.
Closes#6395
Extend the syntax of CURLOPT_RESOLVE strings: allow using a '+' prefix
(similar to the existing '-' prefix for removing entries) to add
DNS cache entries that will time out just like entries that are added
by libcurl itself.
Append " (non-permanent)" to info log message in case a non-permanent
entry is added.
Adjust relevant comments to reflect the new behavior.
Adjust documentation.
Extend unit1607 to test the new functionality.
Closes#6294
Paused transfers should not be stopped due to slow speed even when
CURLOPT_LOW_SPEED_LIMIT is set. Additionally, the slow speed timer is
now reset when the transfer is unpaused - as otherwise it would easily
just trigger immediately after unpausing.
Reported-by: Harry Sintonen
Fixes#6358Closes#6359
... as the socket might be readable all the time when paused and thus
causing a busy-loop.
Reported-by: Harry Sintonen
Reviewed-by: Jay Satiro
Fixes#6356Closes#6357
It is a security process for HTTP.
It doesn't seems to be standard, but it is used by some cloud providers.
Aws:
https://docs.aws.amazon.com/general/latest/gr/signature-version-4.html
Outscale:
https://wiki.outscale.net/display/EN/Creating+a+Canonical+Request
GCP (I didn't test that this code work with GCP though):
https://cloud.google.com/storage/docs/access-control/signing-urls-manually
most of the code is in lib/http_v4_signature.c
Information require by the algorithm:
- The URL
- Current time
- some prefix that are append to some of the signature parameters.
The data extracted from the URL are: the URI, the region,
the host and the API type
example:
https://api.eu-west-2.outscale.com/api/latest/ReadNets
~~~ ~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
^ ^ ^
/ \ URI
API type region
Small description of the algorithm:
- make canonical header using content type, the host, and the date
- hash the post data
- make canonical_request using custom request, the URI,
the get data, the canonical header, the signed header
and post data hash
- hash canonical_request
- make str_to_sign using one of the prefix pass in parameter,
the date, the credential scope and the canonical_request hash
- compute hmac from date, using secret key as key.
- compute hmac from region, using above hmac as key
- compute hmac from api_type, using above hmac as key
- compute hmac from request_type, using above hmac as key
- compute hmac from str_to_sign using above hmac as key
- create Authorization header using above hmac, prefix pass in parameter,
the date, and above hash
Signed-off-by: Matthias Gatto <matthias.gatto@outscale.com>
Closes#5703
It seems current hmac implementation use md5 for the hash,
V4 signature require sha256, so I've added the needed struct in
this commit.
I've added the functions that do the hmac in v4 signature file
as a static function ,in the next patch of the serie,
because it's used only by this file.
Signed-off-by: Matthias Gatto <matthias.gatto@outscale.com>
The linux kernel does not report all ICMP errors back to userspace due
to historical reasons.
IP*_RECVERR sockopt must be turned on to have the correct behaviour
which is to pass all ICMP errors to userspace.
See https://bugzilla.kernel.org/show_bug.cgi?id=202355Closes#6341