We're mostly saying just "curl" in lower case these days so here's a big
cleanup to adapt to this reality. A few instances are left as the
project could still formally be considered called cURL.
- Call Curl_initinfo on init and duphandle.
Prior to this change the statistical and informational variables were
simply zeroed by calloc on easy init and duphandle. While zero is the
correct default value for almost all info variables, there is one where
it isn't (filetime initializes to -1).
Bug: https://github.com/curl/curl/issues/1103
Reported-by: Neal Poole
Cokie with the same domain but different tailmatching property are now
considered different and do not replace each other. If header contains
following lines then two cookies will be set: Set-Cookie: foo=bar;
domain=.foo.com; expires=Thu Mar 3 GMT 8:56:27 2033 Set-Cookie: foo=baz;
domain=foo.com; expires=Thu Mar 3 GMT 8:56:27 2033
This matches Chrome, Opera, Safari, and Firefox behavior. When sending
stored tokens to foo.com Chrome, Opera, Firefox store send them in the
stored order, while Safari pre-sort the cookies.
Closes#1050
Add the new option CURLOPT_KEEP_SENDING_ON_ERROR to control whether
sending the request body shall be completed when the server responds
early with an error status code.
This is suitable for manual NTLM authentication.
Reviewed-by: Jay Satiro
Closes https://github.com/curl/curl/pull/904
.. and add that --proto-redir and CURLOPT_REDIR_PROTOCOLS do not
override protocols denied by --proto and CURLOPT_PROTOCOLS.
- Add a test to enforce: --proto deny must override --proto-redir allow
Closes https://github.com/curl/curl/pull/1031
... like when a HTTP/0.9 response comes back without any headers at all
and just a body this now prevents that body from being sent to the
callback etc.
Adapted test 1144 to verify.
Fixes#973
Assisted-by: Ray Satiro
Since we're using CURLE_FTP_WEIRD_SERVER_REPLY in imap, pop3 and smtp as
more of a generic "failed to parse" introduce an alias without FTP in
the name.
Closes https://github.com/curl/curl/pull/975
With HTTP/2 each transfer is made in an indivial logical stream over the
connection, making most previous errors that caused the connection to get
forced-closed now instead just kill the stream and not the connection.
Fixes#941
This fixes tests that were added after 113f04e664 as the tests would
fail otherwise.
We bring back "Proxy-Connection: Keep-Alive" now unconditionally to fix
regressions with old and stupid proxies, but we could possibly switch to
using it only for CONNECT or only for NTLM in a future if we want to
gradually reduce it.
Fixes#954
Reported-by: János Fekete
The HTTP/2 tests brought with commit bf05606ef1 were using the internal
name 'http2' for the HTTP/2 server, while in fact that name was already
used for the second instance of the HTTP server. This made tests using
the second instance (like test 2050) fail after a HTTP/2 test had run.
The server is now known as HTTP/2 internally and within the <server>
section in test cases. 1700, 1701 and 1702 were updated accordingly.
It requires that 'nghttpx' is in the PATH, and it will run the tests
using nghttpx as a front-end proxy in front of the standard HTTP/1 test
server. This uses HTTP/2 over plain TCP.
If you like me have nghttpx installed in a custom path, you can run test 1700
like this:
$ PATH=$PATH:$HOME/build-nghttp2/bin/ ./runtests.pl 1700
Mostly in order to support broken web sites that redirect to broken URLs
that are accepted by browsers.
Browsers are typically even more leniant than this as the WHATWG URL
spec they should allow an _infinite_ amount. I tested 8000 slashes with
Firefox and it just worked.
Added test case 1141, 1142 and 1143 to verify the new parser.
Closes#791
Prior to this change a width arg could be erroneously output, and also
width and precision args could not be used together without crashing.
"%0*d%s", 2, 9, "foo"
Before: "092"
After: "09foo"
"%*.*s", 5, 2, "foo"
Before: crash
After: " fo"
Test 557 is updated to verify this and more
It does open up a miniscule risk that one of the other protocols that
libcurl could use would send back a Content-Disposition header and then
curl would act on it even if not HTTP.
A future mitigation for this risk would be to allow the callback to ask
libcurl which protocol is being used.
Verified with test 1312
Closes#760
While being debated (in #716) and a violation of RFC 7230 section 5.4,
this test verifies that the existing functionality works as intended. It
strips the dot from the host name and uses the host without dot
throughout the internals.
... for checking ability to receive full HTTP response when POST request
is used with slow read callback function.
This test checks for bug #657 and verifies the work-around from
72d5e144fb.
Closes#720
RFC 6265 section 4.1.1 spells out that the first name/value pair in the
header is the actual cookie name and content, while the following are
the parameters.
libcurl previously had a more liberal approach which causes significant
problems when introducing new cookie parameters, like the suggested new
cookie priority draft.
The previous logic read all n/v pairs from left-to-right and the first
name used that wassn't a known parameter name would be used as the
cookie name, thus accepting "Set-Cookie: Max-Age=2; person=daniel" to be
a cookie named 'person' while an RFC 6265 compliant parser should
consider that to be a cookie named 'Max-Age' with an (unknown) parameter
'person'.
Fixes#709
- Add tests.
- Add an example to CURLOPT_TFTP_NO_OPTIONS.3.
- Add --tftp-no-options to expose CURLOPT_TFTP_NO_OPTIONS.
Bug: https://github.com/curl/curl/issues/481