It was used (intended) to pass in the size of the 'socks' array that is
also passed to these functions, but was rarely actually checked/used and
the array is defined to a fixed size of MAX_SOCKSPEREASYHANDLE entries
that should be used instead.
Closes#4169
Specifying O_APPEND in conjunction with O_TRUNC and O_CREAT does not
make much sense. And this combination of flags is not accepted by all
SFTP servers (at least not Apache SSHD).
Fixes#4147Closes#4148
They serve very little purpose and mostly just add noise. Most of them
have been around for a very long time. I read them all before removing
or rephrasing them.
Ref: #3876Closes#3883
- no need to have them protocol specific
- no need to set pointers to them with the Curl_setup_transfer() call
- make Curl_setup_transfer() operate on a transfer pointer, not
connection
- switch some counters from long to the more proper curl_off_t type
Closes#3627
By default, libssh creates a new socket, instead of using the socket
created by curl for SSH connections.
Pass the socket created by curl to libssh using ssh_options_set() with
SSH_OPTIONS_FD directly after ssh_new(). So libssh uses our socket
instead of creating a new one.
This approach is very similar to what is done in the libssh2 code, where
the socket created by curl is passed to libssh2 when
libssh2_session_startup() is called.
Fixes#3491Closes#3495
The function does not return the same value as snprintf() normally does,
so readers may be mislead into thinking the code works differently than
it actually does. A different function name makes this easier to detect.
Reported-by: Tomas Hoger
Assisted-by: Daniel Gustafsson
Fixes#3296Closes#3297
The verbose message "Authentication using SSH public key file" was
printed each time the ssh_userauth_publickey_auto() was called, which
meant each time a packet was transferred over network because the API
operates in non-blocking mode.
This patch makes sure that the verbose message is printed just once
(when the authentication state is entered by the SSH state machine).
ssh-libssh.c:2429:21: warning: result of '1 << 31' requires 33 bits to
represent, but 'int' only has 32 bits [-Wshift-overflow=]
'len' will never be that big anyway so I converted the run-time check to
a regular assert.
The previous code was incorrectly following the libssh2 error detection
for libssh2_sftp_statvfs, which is not correct for libssh's sftp_statvfs.
Fixes#2142
Signed-off-by: Nikos Mavrogiannopoulos <nmav@gnutls.org>
The SFTP back-end supports asynchronous reading only, limited
to 32-bit file length. Writing is synchronous with no other
limitations.
This also brings keyboard-interactive authentication.
Signed-off-by: Nikos Mavrogiannopoulos <nmav@gnutls.org>
libssh is an alternative library to libssh2.
https://www.libssh.org/
That patch set also introduces support for ECDSA
ed25519 keys, as well as gssapi authentication.
Signed-off-by: Nikos Mavrogiannopoulos <nmav@redhat.com>