591 -> FTP multi PORT and 425 on upload
592 -> FTP multi PORT and 421 on upload
593 -> FTP multi PORT upload, no data conn and no transient neg. reply
594 -> FTP multi PORT upload, no data conn and no positive prelim. reply
1206 -> FTP PORT and 425 on download
1207 -> FTP PORT and 421 on download
1208 -> FTP PORT download, no data conn and no transient negative reply
1209 -> FTP PORT download, no data conn and no positive preliminary reply
This test is created to verify Rene Bernhardt's patch which makes sure
libcurl properly _not_ deals with Negotiate if not asked to even if the
proxy says it can serve it.
As commit 5850cc4808 clarifies, libcurl can deliver header lines that
are longer than CURL_MAX_WRITE_SIZE, only body data is limited to that
size. The curl tool has check (when built debug-enabled) that made the
wrong checks and this new test 1205 verifies that larger headers work.
The fix is pretty much the one Nick Zitzmann provided, just edited to do
the right indent levels and with test case 1204 added to verify the fix.
Bug: http://curl.haxx.se/mail/lib-2011-10/0190.html
Reported by: Nick Zitzmann
Content-disposition headers can provide file names with semicolons which
previously would be cut off at that point.
Added test case 1311 and 1312 to verify -J.
Bug: http://curl.haxx.se/bug/view.cgi?id=3375603
Reported by: Peter Hjalmarsson
When libcurl has said to the server that there's a POST or PUT coming
(with a content-length and all) it has to either deliver that amount of
data or it needs to close the connection before trying a second request.
Adds test case 1129, 1130 and 1131
The bug report is about when used with 100-continue, but the change is
more generic.
Bug: http://curl.haxx.se/mail/lib-2011-06/0191.html
Reported by: Steven Parkes
When a time condition isn't met, so that no body is delivered to the
application even though a 2xx response is being read from the server, we
must close the connection to avoid a re-use of the connection to be
completely tricked.
Added test 1128 to verify.
Added test 1126 and 1127 to verify curl's behaviour when If-Modified-Since
is used and a 200 is returned.
The list of test cases in Makefile.am is now sorted numerically.
When TE: is inserted in the request, we must add a "Connection: TE" as
well to be HTTP 1.1 compliant. If a custom Connection: header is passed
in, we must use that and only append TE to it. Test case 1125 verifies
TE: + custom Connection:.
Transfer-Encoding differs from Content-Encoding in a few subtle ways,
but primarily it concerns the transfer only and not the content so when
discovered to be compressed we know we have to uncompress it. There will
only arrive compressed transfers in a response after we have requested
them with the appropriate TE: header.
Test case 1122 and 1123 verify.
This test case is meant to verify that the logic in commit
60172a0446 actually works. This test failed for me before that
change and it works after it.
Add test 582 for uploading a file using sftp and the multi interface.
(Patch and test slightly tweaked by Daniel Stenberg)
Initially marked as disabled until it is fixed in the source.
The URL parser got a little stricter as it now considers a ? to be a
host name divider so that the slightly sloppier URLs work too. The
problem that made me do this change was the reported problem with an URL
like: www.example.com?email=name@example.com This form of URL is not
really a legal URL (due to the missing slash after the host name) but is
widely accepted by all major browsers and libcurl also already accepted
it, it was just the '@' letter that triggered the problem now.
The side-effect of this change is that now libcurl no longer accepts the
? letter as part of user-name or password when given in the URL, which
it used to accept (and is tested in test 191). That letter is however
mentioned in RFC3986 to be required to be percent encoded since it is
used as a divider.
Bug: http://curl.haxx.se/bug/view.cgi?id=3090268
HTTP allows that a server sends trailing headers after all the chunks
have been sent WITHOUT signalling their presence in the first response
headers. The "Trailer:" header is only a SHOULD there and as we need to
handle the situation even without that header I made libcurl ignore
Trailer: completely.
Test case 1116 was added to verify this and to make sure we handle more
than one trailer header properly.
Reported by: Patrick McManus
Bug: http://curl.haxx.se/bug/view.cgi?id=3052450
The 66 bytes checked are those 38 bytes with the chunked encoding
headers added: 8+8+10+35+5 = 66
The three-letter words become 8 bytes on the wire because they are sent
like: "3\r\none\r\n"
... and there's the trailing 5 bytes write after the four lines since
the final chunk is sent (which is "0\r\n\r\n").