Make GnuTLS old and new consistent, specify the desired protocol, cipher
and certificate type in always in both modes. Disable insecure ciphers
as reported by howsmyssl.com. Honor not only --sslv3, but also the
--tlsv1[.N] switches.
Related Bug: http://curl.haxx.se/bug/view.cgi?id=1323
Due to the changes in commit 3c929ff9f6 and lack of subsequent
updates, curl could return a CURLE_FTP_ACCEPT_FAILED error if
checkpasswd() ran out of memory in versions 7.33.0 and 7.34.0.
Updated the function declaration and return code to return
CURLE_OUT_OF_MEMORY and CURLE_OK where appropriate.
conversion from 'curl_off_t' to 'size_t', possible loss of data
Where curl_off_t is a 64-bit word and size_t is 32-bit - for example
with 32-bit Windows builds.
In the rare instance where getparameter() may return PARAM_NO_MEM whilst
parsing a URL, cURL would return this error code, which is equivalent to
CURLE_FTP_ACCEPT_FAILED in cURL error codes terms.
Instead, return CURLE_FAILED_INIT and output the failure reason as per
the other usage of getparameter().
Increasing the update frequency of the progress bar to 10Hz greatly
improves the visual appearance of the progress bar (at least in my
impression).
Signed-off-by: Tobias Markus <tobias@markus-regensburg.de>
Currently, the progress bar is updated at 5Hz. Because it is often not
updated to 100% when the download is finished and curl exits, the bar
is often "stuck" at 90-something, thus irritating the user.
This patch fixes this by always updating the progress bar (instead of
waiting for 200ms to have elapsed) while the download is finished but
curl has not yet exited. This should not greatly affect performance
because that moment is rather short.
Signed-off-by: Tobias Markus <tobias@markus-regensburg.de>
1 - allow >31 bit max-age values
2 - don't overflow on extremely large max-age values when we add the
value to the current time
3 - make sure max-age takes precedence over expires as dictated by
RFC6265
Bug: http://curl.haxx.se/mail/lib-2014-01/0130.html
Reported-by: Chen Prog
Also, make the ftp server return a canned response that doesn't
cause XML verification problems. Although the test file format
isn't technically XML, it's still handy to be able to use XML
tools to verify and manipulate them.
The issue is with HP-UX that is comes with HP flavor of MIT
Kerberos. This means that there is no krb5-config and the lib is called
libgss.so
Bug: http://curl.haxx.se/bug/view.cgi?id=1321
Starting with Visual Studio 2013 (VC12) and Windows 8.1 the
GetVersionInfoEx() function has been marked as deprecated and it's
return value atered. Updated connect.c and curl_sspi.c to use
VerifyVersionInfo() where possible, which has been available since
Windows 2000.
Since /dev/stdout is not always emulated on Windows,
just skip the output option on Windows.
MinGW/msys support /dev/stdout only from a new login shell.
A transfer timeout could result in an error message such as "Operation
timed out after 3000 milliseconds with 19 bytes of -1 received". This
patch removes the non-sensical "of -1" when the size of the transfer
is unknown, mirroring the logic in lib/transfer.c
tstunnel on Windows does not support the pid option and is unable
to write to an output log that is already being used as a redirection
target for stdout. Therefore it does now output all log data to stdout
by default and secureserver.pl creates a fake pidfile on Windows.
Simplified the SMTP multi example as this example should demonstrate
the differences the easy and multi interfaces rather than introduce new
concepts such as user authentication and TLS which are shown in the TLS
and SSL examples.
By default even recent versions of OpenSSL support and accept both
"export strength" ciphers, small-bitsize ciphers as well as downright
deprecated ones.
This change sets a default cipher set that avoids the worst ciphers, and
subsequently makes https://www.howsmyssl.com/a/check no longer grade
curl/OpenSSL connects as 'Bad'.
Bug: http://curl.haxx.se/bug/view.cgi?id=1323
Reported-by: Jeff Hodges
With the recently added timeout "reminder" functionality, there's no
reason left for us to execute timeout code before the time is
ripe. Simplifies the handling too.
This will make the *TIMEOUT and *CONNECTTIMEOUT options more accurate
again, which probably is most important when the *_MS versions are used.
In multi_socket, make sure to update 'now' after having handled activity
on a socket.
Currently VC7 and VC7.1 builds have to be ran with the VC variable set
to vc6 which is not only inconsistent with the nmake winbuild system
but also with newer versions of Visual Studio supported by this file.
Note: This doesn't break the build for anyone still running with the
VC variable set to vc6 or not set (which defaults to vc6).
BACKGROUND:
We have learned that on some systems timeout timers are inaccurate and
might occasionally fire off too early. To make the multi_socket API work
with this, we made libcurl execute timeout actions a bit early too if
they are within our MULTI_TIMEOUT_INACCURACY. (added in commit
2c72732ebf, present since 7.21.0)
Switching everything to the multi API made this inaccuracy problem
slightly more notable as now everyone can be affected.
Recently (commit 21091549c0) we tweaked that inaccuracy value to make
timeouts more accurate and made it platform specific. We also figured
out that we have code at places that check for fixed timeout values so
they MUST NOT run too early as then they will not trigger at all (see
commit be28223f35 and a691e04470) - so there are definitately problems
with running timeouts before they're supposed to run. (We've handled
that so far by adding the inaccuracy margin to those specific timeouts.)
The libcurl multi_socket API tells the application with a callback that
a timeout expires in N milliseconds (and it explicitly will not tell it
again for the same timeout), and the application is then supposed to
call libcurl when that timeout expires. When libcurl subsequently gets
called with curl_multi_socket_action(...CURL_SOCKET_TIMEOUT...), it
knows that the application thinks the timeout expired - and alas, if it
is within the inaccuracy level libcurl will run code handling that
handle.
If the application says CURL_SOCKET_TIMEOUT to libcurl and _isn't_
within the inaccuracy level, libcurl will not consider the timeout
expired and it will not tell the application again since the timeout
value is still the same.
NOW:
This change introduces a modified behavior here. If the application says
CURL_SOCKET_TIMEOUT and libcurl finds no timeout code to run, it will
inform the application about the timeout value - *again* even if it is
the same timeout that it already told about before (although libcurl
will of course tell it the updated time so that it'll still get the
correct remaining time). This way, we will not risk that the application
believes it has done its job and libcurl thinks the time hasn't come yet
to run any code and both just sit waiting. This also allows us to
decrease the MULTI_TIMEOUT_INACCURACY margin, but that will be handled
in a separate commit.
A repeated timeout update to the application risk that the timeout will
then fire again immediately and we have what basically is a busy-loop
until the time is fine even for libcurl. If that becomes a problem, we
need to address it.
The net effect of this bug as it appeared to users, would be that
libcurl would timeout in the connect phase.
When disabling IPv6 use but still using getaddrinfo, libcurl would
wrongly not init the "hints" struct field in init_thread_sync() which
would subsequently lead to a getaddrinfo() invoke with a zeroed hints
with ai_socktype set to 0 instead of SOCK_STREAM. This would lead to
different behaviors on different platforms but basically incorrect
output.
This code was introduced in 483ff1ca75, released in curl 7.20.0.
This bug became a problem now due to the happy eyeballs code and how
libcurl now traverses the getaddrinfo() results differently.
Bug: http://curl.haxx.se/mail/lib-2014-01/0061.html
Reported-by: Fabian Frank
Debugged-by: Fabian Frank