Following a change in the way socket handler are registered, the custom
recv and send method were conditionaly registered.
We need to register them everytime to handle the ftp security
extensions.
Re-added the clear text handling in sec_recv.
Curl_sec_login was returning the opposite result that the code in ftp.c
was expecting. Simplified the return code (using a CURLcode) so to see
more clearly what is going on.
The functions Curl_disconnect() and Curl_done() are both used within the
scope of a single request so they cannot be allowed to use
Curl_expire(... 0) to kill all timeouts as there are some timeouts that
are set before a request that are supposed to remain until the request
is done.
The timeouts are now instead cleared at curl_easy_cleanup() and when the
multi state machine changes a handle to the complete state.
The date format in RFC822 allows that the seconds part of HH:MM:SS is
left out, but this function didn't allow it. This change also includes a
modified test case that makes sure that this now works.
Reported by: Matt Ford
Bug: http://curl.haxx.se/bug/view.cgi?id=3076529
tftpd-hpa has a bug where it will send an incorrect ack when the block
counter wraps and tftp options have been sent. Work around that by
accepting an ack for 65535 when we're expecting one for 0.
- |fd| is now a curl_socket_t and |len| a size_t to avoid conversions.
- Added 2 FIXMEs about the 2 unsigned -> signed conversions.
- Included 2 minor changes to Curl_sec_end.
- Renamed it to do_sec_send as it is the function doing the actual
transfer.
- Do not return any values as no one was checking it and it never
reported a failure (added a FIXME about checking for errors).
- Renamed the variables to make their use more specific.
- Removed some casts (int -> curl_socket_t, ...)
- Avoid doing the htnl <-> nthl twice by caching the 2 results.
- Renamed the variables name to better match their intend.
- Unified the |decoded_len| checks.
- Added some FIXMEs to flag some improvement that did not go in this
change.
- Removed sec_prot_internal as it is now inlined in the function (this removed
a redundant check).
- Changed the prototype to return an error code.
- Updated the method to use the new ftp_send_command function.
- Added a level_to_char helper method to avoid relying on the compiler's
bound checks. This default to the maximum security we have in case of a
wrong input.
Tighten the type of the |data| parameter to avoid a cast. Also made
it const as we should not modify it.
Added a DEBUGASSERT on the size to be written while changing it.
To do so, made block_read call Curl_read_plain instead of read.
While changing them renamed block_read to socket_read and sec_get_data
to read_data to better match their function.
Also fixed a potential memory leak in block_read.
Obviously, browsers ignore a colon without a following port number. Both
Firefox and Chrome just removes the colon for such URLs. This change
does not remove the colon for URLs sent over a HTTP proxy, so we should
consider doing that change as well.
Reported by: github user 'kreshano'
curl_easy_duphandle() was not properly duping the ares channel. The
ares_dup() function was introduced in c-ares 1.6.0 so by starting to use
this function we also raise the bar and require c-ares >= 1.6.0
(released Dec 9, 2008) for such builds.
Reported by: Ning Dong
Bug: http://curl.haxx.se/mail/lib-2010-08/0318.html
If built without HTTP or proxy support it would cause a compiler warning
due to the unused variable. I moved the declaration of it into the only
scope it is used.
bool_false is the internal name used in the setup_once.h definition
we fall back to for non-C99 non-stdbool systems, it's not the actual
name to use in assignments (we use bool_false, bool_true there to
avoid global namespace problems, see comment in setup_once.h).
The correct C99 value to use is 'false', but let's use FALSE as
used elsewhere when assigning to bits.close. FALSE is set equal
to 'false' in setup_once.h when possible.
This fixes a build problem on C99 targets.
As of curl-7.21.1 tunnelling ldap queries through HTTP Proxies is not
supported. Actually if --proxytunnel command-line option (or equivalent
CURLOPT_HTTPPROXYTUNNEL) is used for ldap queries like
ldap://ldap.my.server.com/... You are unable to successfully execute the
query. In facts ldap_*_bind is executed directly against the ldap server
and proxy is totally ignored. This is true for both openLDAP and
Microsoft LDAP API.
Step to reproduce the error:
Just launch "curl --proxytunnel --proxy 192.168.1.1:8080
ldap://ldap.my.server.com/dc=... "
This fix adds an invocation to Curl_proxyCONNECT against the provided
proxy address and on successful "CONNECT" it tunnels ldap query to the
final ldap server through the HTTP proxy. As far as I know Microsoft
LDAP APIs don't permit tunnelling in any way so the patch provided is
for OpenLDAP only. The patch has been developed against OpenLDAP 2.4.23
and has been tested with Microsoft ISA Server 2006 and works properly
with basic, digest and NTLM authentication.
Rodric provide an awesome recipe that proved libcurl didn't timeout at
the requested time - it instead often timed out at [connect time] +
[timeout time] instead of the documented and intended [timeout time]
only. This bug was due to the code using the wrong base offset when
comparing against "now". I could also take the oppurtinity to simplify
the code by properly using of the generic help function for this:
Curl_timeleft.
Reported by: Rodric Glaser
Bug: http://curl.haxx.se/bug/view.cgi?id=3061535
As this function uses return code 0 to mean that there is no timeout, it
needs to check that it doesn't return a time left value that is exactly
zero. It could lead to libcurl doing an extra 1000 ms select() call and
thus not timing out as accurately as it should.
I fell over this bug when working on the bug 3061535 but this fix does
not correct that problem alone, although this is a problem that needs to
be fixed.
Reported by: Rodric Glaser
Bug: http://curl.haxx.se/bug/view.cgi?id=3061535
The timeout is set for the connect phase already at the start of the
request so we should not add a new one, and we MUST not set expire to 0
as that will remove any other potentially existing timeouts.
The code reading chunked encoding attempts to rewind the code if it had
read more data than the chunky parser consumes. The rewinding can fail
and it will then cause an error. This change now makes the rewinding
only happen if pipelining is in use - as that's the only time it really
needs to be done.
Bug: http://curl.haxx.se/mail/lib-2010-08/0297.html
Reported by: Ron Parker
Curl_getconnectinfo() is changed to return a proper curl_socket_t for
the last socket so that it'll work more portably (and cause less
compiler warnings).
Add a timeout check for handles in the state machine so that they will
timeout in all states disregarding what actions that may or may not
happen.
Fixed a bug in socket_action introduced recently when looping over timed
out handles: it wouldn't assign the 'data' variable and thus it wouldn't
properly take care of handles.
In the update_timer function, the code now checks if the timeout has
been removed and then it tells the application. Previously it would
always let the remaining timeout(s) just linger to expire later on.
Each easy handle has a list of timeouts, so as soon as the main timeout
for a handle expires, we must make sure to get the next entry from the
list and re-add the handle to the splay tree.
This was attempted previously but was done poorly in my commit
232ad6549a.
When a new transfer is about to start we now set the proper timeouts to
expire for the multi interface if they are set for the handle. This is a
follow-up bugfix to make sure that easy handles timeout properly when
the times expire and the multi interface is used. This also improves
curl_multi_timeout().
The fix for the busyloop really only is a temporary work-around. It
causes a BLOCKING behavior which is a NO-NO. This function should rather
be split up in a do and a doing piece where the pieces that aren't
possible to send now will be sent in the doing function repeatedly until
the entire request is sent.
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 script works exactly same as the Perl one except for one thing:
when the text descriptions generated with openssl are included then
the md5 fingerprints are missing; seems openssl has either a bug or
a feature which prints the md5 fingerprint output to stdout instead
of writing them to specified file; this script could here do the same
as what the Perl scripr does (redirect stdout into file) but this
makes the script take up double the time because it needs to launch
cmd.exe 140 times (fo each openssl call). So I think for now we just
ommit the md5 fingerprints, and see if openssl will be fixed.
I fell over this bug report that mentioned that libcurl could wrongly
send more than one complete messages at the end of a transfer. Reading
the code confirmed this, so I've added a new multi state to make it not
happen. The mentioned bug report was made by Brad Jorsch but is (oddly
enough) filed in Debian's bug tracker for the "wmweather+" tool.
Bug: http://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=593390
There's an error in http_negotiation.c where a mistake is using only
userpwd even for proxy requests. Ludek provided a patch, but I decided
to write the fix slightly different using his patch as inspiration.
Reported by: Ludek Finstrle
Bug: http://curl.haxx.se/bug/view.cgi?id=3046066
When detecting that the send or recv speed, the multi interface changes
state to TOOFAST and previously there was no timeout set that would
force a recheck but it would rely on the application to somehow call
libcurl anyway. This now sets a timeout for a suitable future time to
check again if the average transfer speed is then below the threshold
again.
Curl_expire() is now expanded to hold a list of timeouts for each easy
handle. Only the closest in time will be the one used as the primary
timeout for the handle and will be used for the splay tree (which sorts
and lists all handles within the multi handle).
When the main timeout has triggered/expired, the next timeout in time
that is kept in the list will be moved to the main timeout position and
used as the key to splay with. This way, all timeouts that are set with
Curl_expire() internally will end up as a proper timeout. Previously any
Curl_expire() that set a _later_ timeout than what was already set was
just silently ignored and thus missed.
Setting Curl_expire() with timeout 0 (zero) will cancel all previously
added timeouts.
Corrects known bug #62.
Instead of looping over all attached easy handles, this now keeps a list
of messages in the multi handle. It allows curl_multi_info_read() to
perform O(1) no matter how many easy handles that are handled. This is
of importance since this function may be polled very frequently by apps
using the multi interface.
When the progress callback is called during the TCP connection, an error
return would accidentally not abort the operation as intended but would
instead be counted as a failure to connect to that particular IP and
libcurl would just continue to try the next. I made singleipconnect()
and trynextip() return CURLcode properly.
Added bonus: it corrected the error code for bad --interface usages,
like tested in test 1084 and test 1085.
Reported by: Adam Light
Bug: http://curl.haxx.se/mail/lib-2010-08/0105.html
Added the -br switch to dynamic builds which fixes the issue I saw
with curl's --version output. Added debug info and symfile for debug
builds to linker opts. Added DLL loader for wlink back, but this time
dependend on wlink version.
Patch posted to the list by malak.jiri AT gmail.com.
The var %MAKEFLAGS is only set in 3 cases: if set as environment
var or as macro definition from commandline, and either with the
-u or -ms switch. Since all these cases are unlikely for the average
user it should be safe to only test if %MAKEFLAGS is defined; this
has the benefit that now all other switches can be used again in
addition to the -u which was formerly not possible.
Curl_llist_init is never used outside of llist.c and thus it should be
static. I also removed the protos for Curl_llist_insert_prev and
Curl_llist_remove_next which are functions we removed from llist.c ages
ago.
Test 563 is enabled now and verifies that the combo FTP type=A URL,
CURLOPT_PORT set and proxy work fine. As a bonus I managed to remove the
somewhat odd FTP check in parse_remote_port() and instead converted it
to a better and more generic 'slash_removed' struct field. Checking the
->protocol field isn't right since when an FTP:// URL is sent over a
HTTP proxy, the protocol is HTTP but the URL was handled by the FTP code
and thus slash_removed is set TRUE for this case.
The struct used for storing the message for a completed transfer is now
no longer allocated separatly but is kept within the main struct kept
for each easy handle so that we avoid one malloc (and the subsequent
free).
When libcurl internally decided to wait for a 100-continue header, there
was no call to the timeout function so there was no timeout callback
called when the multi_socket API was used and thus applications became
either completely wrong or at least ineffecient depending on how they
handled the situation. We now set a timeout to get triggered.
Reported by: Ben Darnell
Bug: http://curl.haxx.se/bug/view.cgi?id=3039744
libssh2 1.2.6 and later handle >32bit file sizes properly even on 32bit
architectures and we make sure to use that ability.
Reported by: Mikael Johansson
Bug: http://curl.haxx.se/mail/lib-2010-08/0052.html
Simply because the TCP might be connected already we cannot skip the
proxy connect procedure. We need to be careful to not overload more
meaning to the bits.tcpconnect field like this.
With this fix, SOCKS proxies work again when the multi interface is
used. I believe this regression was added with commit 4b351d018e,
released as 7.20.1.
Left todo: add a test case that verifies this functionality that
prevents us from breaking it again in the future!
Reported by: Robin Cornelius
Bug: http://curl.haxx.se/bug/view.cgi?id=3033966
Commit 496002ea1c (released in 7.20.1) broke FTPS when using the
multi interface and OpenSSL was used. The condition for the non-blocking
connect was incorrect.
Reported by: Georg Lippitsch
Bug: http://curl.haxx.se/mail/lib-2010-07/0270.html
Previously the host name buffer was only used if gethostname() exists,
but since we converted that into a curl private function that function
always exists and will be used so the buffer needs to exist for all
cases/systems.
A shared library tests/libtest/.libs/lihostname.so is preloaded in NTLM
test-cases to override the system implementation of gethostname(). It
makes it possible to test the NTLM authentication for exact match, and
this way test the implementation of MD4 and DES.
If LD_PRELOAD doesn't work, a debug build willl also workk as debug
builds are now made to prefer a specific environment variable and will
then return that content as host name instead of the actual one.
Kamil wrote the bulk of this, Daniel Stenberg polished it.
lib/Makefile.Watcom works fine already, for src/Makefile.Watcom we
need first to tweak src/Makefile.inc a bit - therefore the handtweaked
list still exists for now.
- make both libcurl and curl makefiles use register calling convention
(previously libcurl had stack calling convention).
- added include paths to the Watcom headers so its no longer required
to set the environment vars for this.
- added -wcd=201 to supress compiler warning about unreachable code.
- use macros for all tools, and removed dependency on GNU tools like rm.
- make ipv6 and debug builds controlable via env vars and so make them
optional instead of default.
- commented WINLDAPAPI and WINBERAPI since they broke with OW 1.8, and
it seems they're not needed (anymore?).
- added rule for hugehelp.c.cvs so that it will be created when not
already exist - this is required for building from a release tarball
since there we have no hugehelp.c.cvs, thus compilation broke.
- removed C_ARG creation from lib/Makefile.Watcom and use CFLAGS
directly as done too in src/Makefile.Watcom - this has the benefit
that we will see all active cflags and defines during compile.
- added LINK-ARG to src/Makefile.Watcom in order to better control
linker input.
- a couple of other minor makefile tweaks here and there ...
- added largefile support for Watcom builds to config-win32.h. Not yet
tested if it really works, but should since Win32 supports it.
- added loaddll stuff to speed up builds if supported.
Win64's 32 bit long but 64 bit size_t caused a warning that we avoid
with a typecast. A small whitespace indent fix was also applied.
Reported by: Adam Light
This passes -Werror to gcc when building curl and libcurl,
allowing easy dection of compile warnings.
Signed-off-by: Ben Greear <greearb@candelatech.com>
... since FTP is using it as well, and potentially other protocols!
Also, an #endif CURL_DISABLE_HTTP was incorrectly marked, as it seems to
end the proxy block instead.
The FTP implementation was missing a timestamp reset point, making the
waiting for responses after sending a post-transfer "QUOTE" command not
working as supposedly. This bug was introduced in 7.20.0
curl_multi perform has two phases: run through every easy handle calling
multi_runsingle and remove expired timers (timer removal).
If a small timer (e.g. 1-10ms) is set during multi_runsingle, then it's
possible that the timer has passed by when the timer removal runs. The
timer which was just added is then removed. This will potentially cause
the timer list to be empty and cause the next call to curl_multi_timeout
to return -1. Ideally, curl_multi_timeout should return 0 in this case.
One way to fix this is to move the struct timeval now = Curl_tvnow(); to
the top of curl_multi_perform. The change does that.
As mentioned in bug report #2956968, the HTTP code wouldn't send the
first empty chunk during the auth negotiation phase of the HTTP request
sending, so the server would wait for data to come and libcurl would
wait for data to arrive... I've made the code not enable chunked
encoding until the auth negotiation is done and thus this scenario
doesn't occur anymore.
Reported by: Sidney San Martn
Bug: http://curl.haxx.se/bug/view.cgi?id=2956968
When curl_multi_remove_handle() is called and an easy handle is returned
to the connection cache held in the multi handle, then we cannot allow
CURLINFO_LASTSOCKET to extract it since that will more or less encourage
that the user uses the socket while it can get used by libcurl again.
Without this fix, we'd get a segfault in Curl_getconnectinfo() trying to
dereference the NULL pointer in 'data->state.connc'.
Bug: http://curl.haxx.se/bug/view.cgi?id=3023840
When configured with '--without-ssl --with-nss', NTLM authentication
now uses NSS crypto library for MD5 and DES. For MD4 we have a local
implementation in that case. More details are available at
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/603783
In order to get it working, curl_global_init() must be called with
CURL_GLOBAL_SSL or CURL_GLOBAL_ALL. That's necessary because NSS needs
to be initialized globally and we do so only when the NSS library is
actually required by protocol. The mentioned call of curl_global_init()
is responsible for creating of the initialization mutex.
There was also slightly changed the NSS initialization scenario, in
particular, loading of the NSS PEM module. It used to be loaded always
right after the NSS library was initialized. Now the library is
initialized as soon as any SSL or NTLM is required, while the PEM module
is prevented from being loaded until the SSL is actually required.
When a hostname resolves to multiple IP addresses and the first one
tried doesn't work, the socket for the second attempt may get dropped on
the floor, causing the request to eventually time out. The issue is that
when using kqueue (as on mac and bsd platforms) instead of select, the
kernel removes the first fd from kqueue when it is closed (in trynextip,
connect.c:503). Trynextip() then goes on to open a new socket, which
gets assigned the same number as the one it just closed. Later in
multi.c, socket_cb is not called because the fd is already in
multi->sockhash, so the new socket is never added to kqueue.
The correct fix is to ensure that socket_cb is called to remove the fd
when trynextip() closes the socket, and again to re-add it after
singleipsocket(). I'm not sure how to cleanly do that, but the attached
patch works around the problem in an admittedly kludgy way by delaying
the close to ensure that the newly-opened socket gets a different fd.
Daniel's added comment: I didn't spot a way to easily do a nicer fix so
I've proceeded with Ben's patch.
Bug: http://curl.haxx.se/bug/view.cgi?id=3017819
Patch by: Ben Darnell
For example the libssh2 based functions return other negative
values than -1 to signal errors and it is important that we catch
them properly. Right before this, various failures from libssh2
were treated as negative download amounts which caused havoc.
My additional call to Curl_pgrsUpdate() would sometimes get
called even though there's no connection (left) so a NULL pointer
would get passed, causing a segfault.
1) no need to call the progress function twice when in the
CURLM_STATE_TOOFAST state.
2) Make sure that the progress callback's return code is
acknowledged when used
As long as no error is reported, the progress function can get
called. This may be a little TOO often so we should keep an eye
on this and possibly make this conditional somehow.
Older unixes want an 'int' instead of 'size_t' as the 3rd
argumment so before this change it would cause warnings such as:
There is an implicit conversion from "unsigned long" to "int";
rounding, sign extension, or loss of accuracy may result.
Was seeing spurious SSL connection aborts using libcurl and
OpenSSL. I tracked it down to uncleared error state on the
OpenSSL error stack - patch attached deals with that.
Rough idea of problem:
Code that uses libcurl calls some library that uses OpenSSL but
don't clear the OpenSSL error stack after an error.
ssluse.c calls SSL_read which eventually gets an EWOULDBLOCK from
the OS. Returns -1 to indicate an error
ssluse.c calls SSL_get_error. First thing, SSL_get_error calls
ERR_get_error to check the OpenSSL error stack, finds an old
error and returns SSL_ERROR_SSL instead of SSL_ERROR_WANT_READ or
SSL_ERROR_WANT_WRITE.
ssluse.c returns an error and aborts the connection
Solution:
Clear the openssl error stack before calling SSL_* operation if
we're going to call SSL_get_error afterwards.
Notes:
This is much more likely to happen with multi because it's easier
to intersperse other calls to the OpenSSL library in the same
thread.
Enable OpenLDAP support for cygwin builds. This support was disabled back
in 2008 due to incompatibilities between OpenSSL and OpenLDAP headers.
cygwin's OpenSSL 0.9.8l and OpenLDAP 2.3.43 versions on cygwin 1.5.25
allow building an OpenLDAP enabled libcurl supporting back to Windows 95.
Remove non-functional CURL_LDAP_HYBRID code and references.
Jason McDonald posted bug report #3006786 when he found that the
SFTP code didn't timeout properly in several places in the code
even if a timeout was set properly.
Based on his suggested patch, I wrote a different implementation
that I think addressed the issue better and also uses the connect
timeout for the initial part of the SSH/SFTP done during the
"protocol connect" phase.
(http://curl.haxx.se/bug/view.cgi?id=3006786)
Igor Novoseltsev reported a problem with the multi socket API and
using timeouts and timers. It boiled down to a problem with
libcurl's use of GetTickCount() interally to figure out the
current time, while Igor's own application code used another
function call.
It made his app call the socket API timeout function a bit
_before_ libcurl would consider the timeout to trigger, and that
could easily lead to timeouts or stalls in the app. It seems
GetTickCount() in general often has no better resolution than
16ms and switching to the alternative function
QueryPerformanceCounter has its share of problems:
http://www.virtualdub.org/blog/pivot/entry.php?id=106
We address this problem by simply having libcurl treat timers
that already has occured or will occur within 40ms subject for
treatment. I'm confident that there are other implementations and
operating systems with similarly in accurate timer functions so
it makes sense to have applied generically and I don't believe we
sacrifice much by adding a 40ms inaccuracy on these timeouts.
makes the LDAP code much cleaner, nicer and in general being a
better libcurl citizen. If a new enough OpenLDAP version is
detect, the new and shiny lib/openldap.c code is then used
instead of the old cruft
Code by Howard, minor cleanups by Daniel.
bool in curl internals is unsigned char and should not be used
to receive return value from functions returning int - this fails
when using IBM VisualAge and Tru64 compilers.
Eric Mertens posted bug #3003705: when we made TFTP use the
correct timeout option when sent to the server (fixed May 18th
2010) it became obvious that libcurl used invalid timeout values
(300 by default while the RFC allows nothing above 255). While of
course it is obvious that as TFTP has worked thus far without
being able to set timeout at all, just removing the setting
wouldn't make any difference in behavior. I decided to still keep
it (but fix the problem) as it now actually allows for easier
(future) customization of the timeout.
(http://curl.haxx.se/bug/view.cgi?id=3003705)
In a normal expression, doing [unsigned short] + 1 will not wrap
at 16 bits so the comparisons and outputs were done wrong. I
added a macro do make sure it gets done right.
Douglas Kilpatrick filed bug report #3004787 about it:
http://curl.haxx.se/bug/view.cgi?id=3004787
By undefing a bunch of E* defines that VC10 has started to define
but that we redefine internally to their WSA* alternatives when
building for Windows.
Eric Mertens posted bug report #3003005 pointing out that the
libcurl TFTP code was not sending the timeout option properly to
the server, and suggested a fix.
(http://curl.haxx.se/bug/view.cgi?id=3003005)
John-Mark Bell filed bug #3000052 that identified a problem (with
an associated patch) with the OpenSSL handshake state machine
when the multi interface is used:
Performing an https request using a curl multi handle and using
select or epoll to wait for events results in a hang. It appears
that the cause is the fix for bug #2958179, which makes
ossl_connect_common unconditionally return from the step 2 loop
when fetching from a multi handle.
When ossl_connect_step2 has completed, it updates
connssl->connecting_state to ssl_connect_3. ossl_connect_common
will then return to the caller, as a multi handle is in
use. Eventually, the client code will call curl_multi_fdset to
obtain an updated fdset to select or epoll on. For https
requests, curl_multi_fdset will cause https_getsock to be called.
https_getsock will only return a socket handle if the
connecting_state is ssl_connect_2_reading or
ssl_connect_2_writing. Therefore, the client will never obtain a
valid fdset, and thus not drive the multi handle, resulting in a
hang.
(http://curl.haxx.se/bug/view.cgi?id=3000052)
Sebastian V reported bug #3000056 identifying a problem with
redirect following. It showed that when curl followed redirects
it didn't properly ignore the response body of the 30X response
if that response was using compressed Content-Encoding!
(http://curl.haxx.se/bug/view.cgi?id=3000056)
"The BSD version of PolarSSL was made for migratory purposes only and is not
maintained. The GPL version of PolarSSL is actually the only actively
developed version, so I would be very reluctant to use the BSD version." /
Paul Bakker, PolarSSL hacker.
Signed-off-by: Hoi-Ho Chan <hoiho.chan@gmail.com>
FTP(S) use two connections that can be set to different recv and
send functions independently, so by introducing recv+send pairs
in the same manner we already have sockets/connections we can
work with FTPS fine.
This commit fixes the FTPS regression introduced in change d64bd82.
Dirk Manske reported a regression. When connecting with the multi
interface, there were situations where libcurl wouldn't store
connect time correctly as it used to (and is documented to) do.
Using his fine sample program we could repeat it, and I wrote up
test case 573 using that code. The problem does not easily show
itself using the local test suite though.
The fix, also as suggested by Dirk, is a bit on the ugly side as
it adds yet another call to Curl_verboseconnect() and setting the
TIMER_CONNECT time. That situation is subject for some closer
inspection in the future.
Howard Chu brought the bulk work of this patch that properly
moves out the sending and recving of data to the parts of the
code that are properly responsible for the various ways of doing
so.
Daniel Stenberg assisted with polishing a few bits and fixed some
minor flaws in the original patch.
Another upside of this patch is that we now abuse CURLcodes less
with the "magic" -1 return codes and instead use CURLE_AGAIN more
consistently.
This is Hoi-Ho Chan's patch with some minor fixes by me. There
are some potential issues in this, but none worse than we can
sort out on the list and over time.
The main change is to allow input from user-specified methods,
when they are specified with CURLOPT_READFUNCTION.
All calls to fflush(stdout) in telnet.c were removed, which makes
using 'curl telnet://foo.com' painful since prompts and other data
are not always returned to the user promptly. Use
'curl --no-buffer telnet://foo.com' instead. In general,
the user should have their CURLOPT_WRITEFUNCTION do a fflush
for interactive use.
Also fix assumption that reading from stdin never returns < 0.
Old code could crash in that case.
Call progress functions in telnet main loop.
Signed-off-by: Ben Greear <greearb@candelatech.com>
Make sure we don't call memcpy() if the argument is NULL even
though we also passed a zero length then, as the clang analyzer
whined and we want to limit warnings (even false positives) when
they're this easy to fix.
The change of (char) to (unsigned char) will fix long user names
and passwords on systems that have the char type signed by
default.
The recent overhaul of the SSL recv function made this treat a
zero returned from gnutls_record_recv() as an error, and this
caused our HTTPS test cases to fail. We leave it to upper layer
code to detect if an EOF is a problem or not.
This code would previously use dns_entry->addr->ai_canonname
instead of the given host name, which caused us grief and
problems since not all our resolver options do the reverse lookup
and I would also guess that it caused problems with KRB5/GSS with
virtual name-based hosts. Now the host name from the URL is used.
As reported in bug report #2987196, the code for ipv6 already did
the setting of this bit correctly so we copied that logic into
the Curl_ipv4_resolve_r() function as well. KRB code is the only
code we know that might need the cannonical name so only resolve
it for such requests!
Prefixing the FTP quote commands with an asterisk really only
worked for the postquote actions. This is now fixed and test case
227 has been extended to verify.
Matt Wixson found and fixed a bug in the SCP/SFTP area where the
code treated a 0 return code from libssh2 to be the same as
EAGAIN while in reality it isn't. The problem caused a hang in
SFTP transfers from a MessageWay server.
strlen() returns size_t, but ssh libraries are wanting 'unsigned int'. Add
explicit casts and use _ex versions of the ssh library calls.
Signed-off-by: Ben Greear <greearb@candelatech.com>
If you pass a URL to pop3 that does not contain a message ID as
part of the URL, it will currently ask for 'INBOX' which just
causes the pop3 server to return an error.
The change makes libcurl treat en empty message ID as a request
for LIST (list of pop3 message IDs). User's code could then
parse this and download individual messages as desired.
Ben Greear brought a patch that from now on allows all protocols
to specify name and user within the URL, in the same manner HTTP
and FTP have been allowed to in the past - although far from all
of the libcurl supported protocols actually have that feature in
their URL definition spec.
Bob Richmond: There's an annoying situation where libcurl will
read new HTTP response data from a socket, then check if it's a
timeout if one is set. If the last packet received constitutes
the end of the response body, libcurl still treats it as a
timeout condition and reports a message like:
"Operation timed out after 3000 milliseconds with 876 out of 876
bytes received"
It should only a timeout if the timer lapsed and we DIDN'T
receive the end of the response body yet.
This commit fixes the cmake build of curl, and cleans up the
cmake code a little. It removes some commented out code and
some trailing whitespace. To get curl to build the binary
tree include/curl directory needed to be added to the include
path. Also, SIZEOF_SHORT needed to be added. A check for the
lack of defines of SIZEOF_* for warnless.c was added.
Kenny To filed the bug report #2963679 with patch to fix a
problem he experienced with doing multi interface HTTP POST over
a proxy using PROXYTUNNEL. He found a case where it would connect
fine but bits.tcpconnect was not set correct so libcurl didn't
work properly.
(http://curl.haxx.se/bug/view.cgi?id=2963679)
Akos Pasztory filed debian bug report #572276http://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=572276
mentioning a problem with a resource that returns chunked-encoded
_and_ with a Content-Length and libcurl failed to properly ignore
the latter information.
Hauke Duden provided an example program that made the multi
interface crash. His example simply used the multi interface and
did first one FTP transfer and after completion it used a second
easy handle and did another FTP transfer on the same FTP server.
This triggered a bug in the "delayed easy handle kill" system
that curl uses: when an FTP connection is left alive it must keep
an easy handle around internally - only for the purpose of having
an easy handle when it later disconnects it. The code assumed
that when the easy handle was removed and an internal reference
was made, that version could be killed later on when a new easy
handle came using the same connection. This was wrong as Hauke's
example showed that the removed handle wasn't killed for real
until later. This caused a double close attempt => segfault.
Looking at the code of Curl_resolv_timeout() in hostip.c, I think
that in case of a timeout, the signal handler for SIGALRM never
gets removed. I think that in my case it gets executed at some
point later on when execution has long left Curl_resolv_timeout()
or even the cURL library.
The code that is jumped to with siglongjmp() simply sets the
error message to "name lookup timed out" and then returns with
CURLRESOLV_ERROR. I guess that instead of simply returning
without cleaning up, the code should have a goto that jumps to
the spot right after the call to Curl_resolv().
Error codes were not properly returned to the main curl code (and on to apps
using libcurl).
tftp was crapping out when tsize == 0 on upload, but I see no reason to fail
to upload just because the remote file is zero-length. Ignore tsize option on
upload.
The problem mentioned on Dec 10 2009
(http://curl.haxx.se/bug/view.cgi?id=2905220) was only partially fixed.
Partially because an easy handle can be associated with many connections in
the cache (e.g. if there is a redirect during the lifetime of the easy
handle). The previous patch only cleaned up the first one. The new fix now
removes the easy handle from all connections, not just the first one.
makes sure that when using sub-second timeouts, there's no final bad 1000ms
wait. Previously, a sub-second timeout would often make the elapsed time end
up the time rounded up to the nearest second (e.g. 1s for 200ms timeout)
the global timeout if set. Also, as was reported in the bug report #2956437
by Ryan Chan, the time stamp to use as basis for the per command timeout was
not set properly in the DONE phase for FTP (and not for SMTP) so I fixed
that just now. This was a regression compared to 7.19.7 due to the
conversion of FTP code over to the generic pingpong concepts.
http://curl.haxx.se/bug/view.cgi?id=2956437
- SMTP falls back to RFC821 HELO when EHLO fails (and SSL is not required).
- Use of true local host name (i.e.: via gethostname()) when available, as default argument to SMTP HELO/EHLO.
- Test case 804 for HELO fallback.
properly in angle brackets. Recipients provided with CURLOPT_MAIL_RCPT now
get angle bracket wrapping automatically by libcurl unless the recipient
starts with an angle bracket as then the app is assumed to deal with that
properly on its own.
full DATA has been sent, and I modified the test SMTP server to also send
that response. As usual, the DONE operation that is made after a completed
transfer is still not doable in a non-blocking way so this waiting for 250
is unfortunately made blockingly.