The command line tool also independently sets --ftp-skip-pasv-ip by
default.
Ten test cases updated to adapt the modified --libcurl output.
Bug: https://curl.se/docs/CVE-2020-8284.html
CVE-2020-8284
Reported-by: Varnavas Papaioannou
As the plan has been laid out in DEPRECATED. Update docs accordingly and
verify in test 1174. Now requires the option to be set to allow HTTP/0.9
responses.
Closes#4191
Added CURLOPT_HTTP09_ALLOWED and --http0.9 for this purpose.
For now, both the tool and library allow HTTP/0.9 by default.
docs/DEPRECATE.md lays out the plan for when to reverse that default: 6
months after the 7.64.0 release. The options are added already now so
that applications/scripts can start using them already now.
Fixes#2873Closes#3383
... and add "MAILINDEX".
As described in #2789, this is a suggested solution. Changing UID=xx to
actually get mail with UID xx and add "MAILINDEX" to get a mail with a
special index in the mail box (old behavior). So MAILINDEX=1 gives the
first non deleted mail in the mail box.
Fixes#2789Closes#2815
The feature is only enabled if the output is believed to be a tty.
-J: There's some minor differences and improvements in -J handling, as
now J should work with -i and it actually creates a file first using the
initial name and then *renames* that to the one found in
Content-Disposition (if any).
-i: only shows headers for HTTP transfers now (as documented).
Previously it would also show for pieces of the transfer that were HTTP
(for example when doing FTP over a HTTP proxy).
-i: now shows trailers as well. Previously they were not shown at all.
--libcurl: the CURLOPT_HEADER is no longer set, as the header output is
now done in the header callback.
This reverts commit 9ffad8eb13.
It was actually added rather recently in 8e8afa82cb due to a crash
that would otherwise happen in the RTSP code. As I don't think we've
fixed that behavior yet, we better keep this work-around until we have
fixed it better.
That data is only ever used by the CURLOPT_INTERLEAVEFUNCTION callback
and that option isn't set or used by the curl tool!
Updates the 9 tests that verify --libcurl
Closes#2167
Test command 'time curl http://localhost/80GB -so /dev/null' on a Debian
Linux.
Before (middle performing run out 9):
real 0m28.078s
user 0m11.240s
sys 0m12.876s
After (middle performing run out 9)
real 0m26.356s (93.9%)
user 0m5.324s (47.4%)
sys 0m8.368s (65.0%)
Also, doing SFTP over a 200 millsecond latency link is now about 6 times
faster.
Closes#1446
Make this the default for the curl tool (if built with HTTP/2 powers
enabled) unless a specific HTTP version is requested on the command
line.
This should allow more users to get HTTP/2 powers without having to
change anything.