As it was added to multi.h simply to not break test 1135, which now has
been disabled due to the mime API addition anyway and su we can now move
the sslset stuff to where the other curl_global_* prototypes are.
To support telling a string is nul-terminated, symbol CURL_ZERO_TERMINATED
has been introduced.
Documentation updated accordingly.
symbols in versions updated. Added form API symbols deprecation info.
This feature is badly supported in Windows: as a replacement, a caller has
to use curl_mime_data_cb() with fread, fseek and possibly fclose
callbacks to process opened files.
The cli tool and documentation are updated accordingly.
The feature is however kept internally for form API compatibility, with
the known caveats it always had.
As a side effect, stdin size is not determined by the cli tool even if
possible and this results in a chunked transfer encoding. Test 173 is
updated accordingly.
Additional mime-specific tests.
Existing tests updated to reflect small differences (Expect: 100-continue,
data size change due to empty lines, etc).
Option -F headers= keyword added to tests.
test1135 disabled until the entry point order change is resolved.
New example smtp-mime.
Examples postit2 and multi-post converted from form API to mime API.
Some calls in different modules were setting the data handle to NULL, causing
segmentation faults when using builds that enable character code conversions.
Automake gets confused if you want to use C++ static libraries with C
code - basically we need to involve the clang++ linker. The easiest way
of achieving this is to rename the C code as C++ code. This gets us a
bit further along the path and ought to be compatible with Google's
version of clang.
- Start with the basic code from the ossfuzz project.
- Rewrite fuzz corpora to be binary files full of Type-Length-Value
data, and write a glue layer in the fuzzing function to convert
corpora into CURL options.
- Have supporting functions to generate corpora from existing tests
- Integrate with Makefile.am
./sslbackend.c:58:3: warning: else after closing brace on same line (BRACEELSE)
} else if(isdigit(*name)) {
^
./sslbackend.c:62:3: warning: else after closing brace on same line (BRACEELSE)
} else
^
The CURLSSLBACKEND_WOLFSSL is supposed to be an alias for
CURLSSLBACKEND_CYASSL, but used an erronous value. To reduce the risk
for a similar mistake, define the backend aliases to use the enum values
instead.
Reported-by: Gisle Vanem
Bug: https://curl.haxx.se/mail/lib-2017-08/0120.html
it is a one time *set*, not necessarily a one time use... it can be
called again if the first call failed or just listed the alternatives.
clarify that the available backends are the ones this build supports
plus add some formatting
Reported-by: Rich Gray
Bug: https://curl.haxx.se/mail/lib-2017-08/0119.html
destroy_async_data() assumes that if the flag "done" is not set yet, the
thread itself will clean up once the request is complete. But if an
error (generally OOM) occurs before the thread even has a chance to
start, it will never get a chance to clean up and memory will be leaked.
By clearing "done" only just before starting the thread, the correct
cleanup sequence will happen in all cases.
There is a mode in which libcurl is compiled with versioned symbols,
depending on the active SSL backend.
When multiple SSL backends are active, it does not make sense to favor
one over the others, so let's not: introduce a new prefix for the case
where multiple SSL backends are compiled into cURL.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Previously, we used as default SSL backend whatever was first in the
`available_backends` array.
However, some users may want to override that default without patching
the source code.
Now they can: with the --with-default-ssl-backend=<backend> option of
the ./configure script.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
When only one SSL backend is configured, it is totally unnecessary to
let multissl_init() configure the backend at runtime, we can select the
correct backend at build time already.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Previously, the code assumed that at most one of the SSL backends would
be compiled in, emulating OpenSSL's functions if the configured backend
was not OpenSSL itself.
However, now we allow building with multiple SSL backends and choosing
one at runtime. Therefore, metalink needs to be adjusted to handle this
scenario, too.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Let's add a compile time safe API to select an SSL backend. This
function needs to be called *before* curl_global_init(), and can be
called only once.
Side note: we do not explicitly test that it is called before
curl_global_init(), but we do verify that it is not called multiple times
(even implicitly).
If SSL is used before the function was called, it will use whatever the
CURL_SSL_BACKEND environment variable says (or default to the first
available SSL backend), and if a subsequent call to
curl_global_sslset() disagrees with the previous choice, it will fail
with CURLSSLSET_TOO_LATE.
The function also accepts an "avail" parameter to point to a (read-only)
NULL-terminated list of available backends. This comes in real handy if
an application wants to let the user choose between whatever SSL backends
the currently available libcurl has to offer: simply call
curl_global_sslset(-1, NULL, &avail);
which will return CURLSSLSET_UNKNOWN_BACKEND and populate the avail
variable to point to the relevant information to present to the user.
Just like with the HTTP/2 push functions, we have to add the function
declaration of curl_global_sslset() function to the header file
*multi.h* because VMS and OS/400 require a stable order of functions
declared in include/curl/*.h (where the header files are sorted
alphabetically). This looks a bit funny, but it cannot be helped.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
There is information about the compiled-in SSL backends that is really
no concern of any code other than the SSL backend itself, such as which
function (if any) implements SHA-256 summing.
And there is information that is really interesting to the user, such as
the name, or the curl_sslbackend value.
Let's factor out the latter into a publicly visible struct. This
information will be used in the upcoming API to set the SSL backend
globally.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>