include zstd curl patch for Makefile.m32 from vszakats
and include Add CMake support for zstd from Peter Wu
Helped-by: Viktor Szakats
Helped-by: Peter Wu
Closes#5453
Updated terminology in docs, comments and phrases to refer to C strings
as "null-terminated". Done to unify with how most other C oriented docs
refer of them and what users in general seem to prefer (based on a
single highly unscientific poll on twitter).
Reported-by: coinhubs on github
Fixes#5598Closes#5608
This commit changes the behavior of CURLSSLOPT_NATIVE_CA so that it does
not override CURLOPT_CAINFO / CURLOPT_CAPATH, or the hardcoded default
locations. Instead the CA store can now be used at the same time.
The change is due to the impending release. The issue is still being
discussed. The behavior of CURLSSLOPT_NATIVE_CA is subject to change and
is now documented as experimental.
Ref: bc052cc (parent commit)
Ref: https://github.com/curl/curl/issues/5585
Instead of discussing if there's value or meaning (implied or not) in
the colors, let's use words without the same possibly negative
associations.
Closes#5546
This change introduces a generic way to provide binary data in setopt
options, called BLOBs.
This change introduces these new setopts:
CURLOPT_ISSUERCERT_BLOB, CURLOPT_PROXY_SSLCERT_BLOB,
CURLOPT_PROXY_SSLKEY_BLOB, CURLOPT_SSLCERT_BLOB and CURLOPT_SSLKEY_BLOB.
Reviewed-by: Daniel Stenberg
Closes#5357
In libcurl, CURLINFO_CONDITION_UNMET is used to avoid writing to the
output file if the server did not transfered a file based on time
condition. In the same manner, getting a 304 HTTP response back from the
server, for example after passing a custom If-Match-* header, also
fulfill this condition.
Fixes#5181Closes#5183
Reported by the new script 'scripts/copyright.pl'. The script has a
regex whitelist for the files that don't need copyright headers.
Removed three (mostly usesless) README files from docs/
Closes#5141
- Implement new option CURLSSLOPT_REVOKE_BEST_EFFORT and
--ssl-revoke-best-effort to allow a "best effort" revocation check.
A best effort revocation check ignores errors that the revocation check
was unable to take place. The reasoning is described in detail below and
discussed further in the PR.
---
When running e.g. with Fiddler, the schannel backend fails with an
unhelpful error message:
Unknown error (0x80092012) - The revocation function was unable
to check revocation for the certificate.
Sadly, many enterprise users who are stuck behind MITM proxies suffer
the very same problem.
This has been discussed in plenty of issues:
https://github.com/curl/curl/issues/3727,
https://github.com/curl/curl/issues/264, for example.
In the latter, a Microsoft Edge developer even made the case that the
common behavior is to ignore issues when a certificate has no recorded
distribution point for revocation lists, or when the server is offline.
This is also known as "best effort" strategy and addresses the Fiddler
issue.
Unfortunately, this strategy was not chosen as the default for schannel
(and is therefore a backend-specific behavior: OpenSSL seems to happily
ignore the offline servers and missing distribution points).
To maintain backward-compatibility, we therefore add a new flag
(`CURLSSLOPT_REVOKE_BEST_EFFORT`) and a new option
(`--ssl-revoke-best-effort`) to select the new behavior.
Due to the many related issues Git for Windows and GitHub Desktop, the
plan is to make this behavior the default in these software packages.
The test 2070 was added to verify this behavior, adapted from 310.
Based-on-work-by: georgeok <giorgos.n.oikonomou@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Markus Olsson <j.markus.olsson@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Closes https://github.com/curl/curl/pull/4981
- Copy CURLOPT_SSL_OPTIONS.3 description to CURLOPT_PROXY_SSL_OPTIONS.3.
Prior to this change CURLSSLOPT_NO_PARTIALCHAIN was missing from the
CURLOPT_PROXY_SSL_OPTIONS description.
... and refer to that file from from CURLOPT_COOKIEFILE.3 and
CURLOPT_COOKIELIST.3
Assisted-by: Jay Satiro
Reported-by: bsammon on github
Fixes#4805Closes#4806
For compatibility with `fwrite`, the `CURLOPT_HEADERFUNCTION` callback
is passed two `size_t` parameters which, when multiplied, designate the
number of bytes of data passed in. In practice, CURL always sets the
first parameter (`size`) to 1.
This practice is also enshrined in documentation and cannot be changed
in future. The documentation states that the default callback is
`fwrite`, which means `fwrite` must be a suitable function for this
purpose. However, the documentation also states that the callback must
return the number of *bytes* it successfully handled, whereas ISO C
`fwrite` returns the number of items (each of size `size`) which it
wrote. The only way these numbers can be equal is if `size` is 1.
Since `size` is 1 and can never be changed in future anyway, document
that fact explicitly and let users rely on it.
Reported-by: Frank Gevaerts
Commit-message-by: Christopher Head
Ref: https://github.com/curl/curl/pull/2787
Fixes https://github.com/curl/curl/issues/4758
Prior to this change some users did not understand that the "request"
starts when the handle is added to the multi handle, or probably they
did not understand that some of those transfers may be queued and that
time is included in timeout.
Reported-by: Jeroen Ooms
Fixes https://github.com/curl/curl/issues/4486
Closes https://github.com/curl/curl/pull/4489
... just say that limiting operations risk aborting otherwise fine
working transfers. If that means seconds, minutes or hours, we leave to
the user.
Reported-by: Martin Gartner
Closes#4469
For a long time (since 7.28.1) we've returned error when setting the
value to 1 to make applications notice that we stopped supported the old
behavior for 1. Starting now, we treat 1 and 2 exactly the same.
Closes#4241