In case a read callback returns a status (pause, abort, eof,
error) instead of a byte count, drain the bytes read so far but
remember this status for further processing.
Takes care of not losing data when pausing, and properly resume a
paused mime structure when requested.
New tests 670-673 check unpausing cases, with easy or multi
interface and mime or form api.
Fixes#4813
Reported-by: MrdUkk on github
Closes#4833
tool_metalink only supports cryptography from OpenSSL, GnuTLS, NSS,
The Win32 Crypto library and Apple's Common Crypto library.
If an TLS backend such as mbedTLS or WolfSSL is specified then the
following error is given during compilation along, with a load of
unresolved extern errors:
Can't compile METALINK support without a crypto library.
Reviewed-by: Daniel Stenberg
Closes#5006
- remove check for unsupported old CMake versions
- do not link to c-ares library twice
- modernize custom Find modules
- FindLibSSH2:
- pass version to FPHSA to show it in the output
- use LIBSSH2_VERSION define to extract the version number in
one shot. This variable exists in the header for 10 years.
- remove unneeded code
- FindNGHTTP2.cmake:
- drop needless FPHSA argument
- mark found variables as advanced
- FindNSS.cmake:
- show version number
- FindCARES.cmake:
- drop default paths
- use FPHSA instead of checking things by hand
- remove needless explict variable dereference
- simplify count_true()
- allow all policies up to version 3.16 to be set to NEW
- do not rerun check for -Wstrict-aliasing=3 every time
In contrast to every other compiler flag this has a = in it, which CMake
can't have in a variable name.
- only read the interesting strings from curlver.h
Reviewed-by: Peter Wu
Closes https://github.com/curl/curl/pull/4975
... since the socket might not actually be readable anymore when for
example the data is already buffered in the TLS layer.
Fixes#4966
Reported-by: Anders Berg
Closes#5000
This reduces the HTTP/2 window size to 32 MB since libcurl might have to
buffer up to this amount of data in memory and yet we don't want it set
lower to potentially impact tranfer performance on high speed networks.
Requires nghttp2 commit b3f85e2daa629
(https://github.com/nghttp2/nghttp2/pull/1444) to work properly, to end
up in the next release after 1.40.0.
Fixes#4939Closes#4940
Previously, it was not possible to get a known hosts file entry due to
the lack of an API. ssh_session_get_known_hosts_entry(), introduced in
libssh-0.9.0, allows libcurl to obtain such information and behave the
same as when compiled with libssh2.
This also tries to avoid the usage of deprecated functions when the
replacements are available. The behaviour will not change if versions
older than libssh-0.8.0 are used.
Signed-off-by: Anderson Toshiyuki Sasaki <ansasaki@redhat.com>
Fixes#4953Closes#4962
It is still possible to override the executable to run during the test,
using the <tool> tag, but this patch removes the requirement that the
tag must be present for unit tests.
It also removes the possibility of human error when existing test cases
are used as the basis for new tests, as recently witnessed in 81c37124.
Reviewed-by: Daniel Stenberg
Closes#4976
When doing a request with a body + Expect: 100-continue and the server
responds with a 417, the same request will be retried immediately
without the Expect: header.
Added test 357 to verify.
Also added a control instruction to tell the sws test server to not read
the request body if Expect: is present, which the new test 357 uses.
Reported-by: bramus on github
Fixes#4949Closes#4964
Note: The RCPT TO command isn't required to advertise to the server that
it contains UTF-8 characters, instead the server is told that a mail may
contain UTF-8 in any envelope command via the MAIL command.
Support the SMTPUTF8 extension when sending mailbox information in the
MAIL command (FROM and AUTH parameters). Non-ASCII domain names will
be ACE encoded, if IDN is supported, whilst non-ASCII characters in
the local address part are passed to the server.
Reported-by: ygthien on github
Fixes#4828
The dot character between the host and the tld was not being escaped,
which meant it specified a match of 'any' character rather than an
explicit dot separator.
Additionally removed the dot character from the host name as it allowed
the following to be specified as a valid address in our test cases:
<bad@example......com>
Both are typos from 98f7ca7 and 8880f84 :(
I can't remember whether my intention was to allow sub-domains to be
specified in the host or not with these additional dots, but by placing
it outside of the host means it can only be specified once per domain
and by placing a + after the new grouping support for sub-domains is
kept.
Closes#4912