The previous test certificate contained a MD5 hash which is not
supported using TLSv1.2 with Schannel on Windows 7 or newer.
See the update to this blog post on IEInternals / MSDN:
http://blogs.msdn.com/b/ieinternals/archive/2011/03/25/
misbehaving-https-servers-impair-tls-1.1-and-tls-1.2.aspx
"Update: If the server negotiates a TLS1.2 connection with a
Windows 7 or 8 schannel.dll-using client application, and it
provides a certificate chain which uses the (weak) MD5 hash
algorithm, the client will abort the connection (TCP/IP FIN)
upon receipt of the certificate."
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
This one is needed with the gcc options -fstack-protector-all -O2
That brings the number of suppressions for test 165 to four, and I
suspect I could find another two missing without trying very hard. I'm
beginning to think suppressions isn't the best way to handle these
kinds of cases.
Do not try to convert line-endings to CRLF on Windows by setting stdout
to binary mode, just like the curl tool does if --ascii is not specified.
This should prevent corrupted stdout line-ending output like CRCRLF.
In order to make the previously naive text-aware tests work with
binary mode on Windows, text-mode is disabled for them if it is not
actually part of the test case and line-endings are corrected.
According to RFC 2616 and RFC 2326 individual protocol elements, like
headers and except the actual content, are terminated by using CRLF.
Therefore the test data files for these protocols need to contain
mixed line-endings if the actual protocol elements use CRLF while
the file uses LF.
gcc 4.7.2 with -O2 will optimize Curl_connect by inlining some
functions two levels deep, which makes the valgrind suppression
fail to match. The underlying reason for these idna suppressions is
a gcc strlen optimization when compiling libidn; compiling it with
-fno-builtin-strlen makes this suppression unnecessary.
It seems the fips config option causes an error if FIPS mode was
not enabled at stunnel compile-time. FIPS support was disabled
by default in stunnel 5.00, so this is probably really only needed
on versions between 4.32 and 5.00.
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.
lib1515.c:38:26 warning: unused parameter 'curl'
lib1515.c:38:81 warning: unused parameter 'ptr'
lib1515.c:38:5 warning: no previous prototype for 'debug_callback'
lib1515.c:46:5 warning: no previous prototype for 'do_one_request'
lib1515.c:120:3 warning: ISO C90 forbids mixed declarations and code
As well as some code policing such as white space and braces.
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
Fix for bug #1303 (030a2b8cb) was not complete.
libcurl still pruned DNS entries added manually
after detecting a dead connection. This test
checks such behavior.
Test-case 1515 reproduces bug #1303, where libcurl
would incorrectly prune DNS entries added via
CURLOPT_RESOLVE after the DNS_CACHE_TIMEOUT had
expired.
The test contains a cookie jar file where one of the cookies has an
expiry date of 1391252187 -- Sat, 1 Feb 2014 10:56:27 GMT which has
now expired. Updated to Wed, 14 Oct 2037 16:36:33 GMT as per test
179.
Reported-by: Adam Sampson
Bug: http://curl.haxx.se/bug/view.cgi?id=1330
Since the timer resolution is lower, there are actually cases that
the compared values are equal. Therefore we check for previous
timestamps being greater than the current one instead.