Fixes#3436Closes#3448
Problem 1
After LOTS of scratching my head, I eventually realized that even when doing
10 uploads in parallel, sometimes the socket callback to the application that
tells it what to wait for on the socket, looked like it would reflect the
status of just the single transfer that just changed state.
Digging into the code revealed that this was indeed the truth. When multiple
transfers are using the same connection, the application did not correctly get
the *combined* flags for all transfers which then could make it switch to READ
(only) when in fact most transfers wanted to get told when the socket was
WRITEABLE.
Problem 1b
A separate but related regression had also been introduced by me when I
cleared connection/transfer association better a while ago, as now the logic
couldn't find the connection and see if that was marked as used by more
transfers and then it would also prematurely remove the socket from the socket
hash table even in times other transfers were still using it!
Fix 1
Make sure that each socket stored in the socket hash has a "combined" action
field of what to ask the application to wait for, that is potentially the ORed
action of multiple parallel transfers. And remove that socket hash entry only
if there are no transfers left using it.
Problem 2
The socket hash entry stored an association to a single transfer using that
socket - and when curl_multi_socket_action() was called to tell libcurl about
activities on that specific socket only that transfer was "handled".
This was WRONG, as a single socket/connection can be used by numerous parallel
transfers and not necessarily a single one.
Fix 2
We now store a list of handles in the socket hashtable entry and when libcurl
is told there's traffic for a particular socket, it now iterates over all
known transfers using that single socket.
This adds support for wildcard hosts in CURLOPT_RESOLVE. These are
try-last so any non-wildcard entry is resolved first. If specified,
any host not matched by another CURLOPT_RESOLVE config will use this
as fallback.
Example send a.com to 10.0.0.1 and everything else to 10.0.0.2:
curl --resolve *:443:10.0.0.2 --resolve a.com:443:10.0.0.1 \
https://a.comhttps://b.com
This is probably quite similar to using:
--connect-to a.com:443:10.0.0.1:443 --connect-to :443:10.0.0.2:443
Closes#3406
Reviewed-by: Daniel Stenberg <daniel@haxx.se>
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
This adds the CURLOPT_TRAILERDATA and CURLOPT_TRAILERFUNCTION
options that allow a callback based approach to sending trailing headers
with chunked transfers.
The test server (sws) was updated to take into account the detection of the
end of transfer in the case of trailing headers presence.
Test 1591 checks that trailing headers can be sent using libcurl.
Closes#3350
Add functionality so that protocols can do custom keepalive on their
connections, when an external API function is called.
Add docs for the new options in 7.62.0
Closes#1641
Handles created with curl_easy_duphandle do not use the SSL engine set
up in the original handle. This fixes the issue by storing the engine
name in the internal url state and setting the engine from its name
inside curl_easy_duphandle.
Reported-by: Anton Gerasimov
Signed-of-by: Laurent Bonnans
Fixes#2829Closes#2833
Deal with tiny "HTTP/0.9" (header-less) responses by checking the
status-line early, even before a full "HTTP/" is received to allow
detecting 0.9 properly.
Test 1266 and 1267 added to verify.
Fixes#2420Closes#2872
Previously it was checked for in configure/cmake, but that would then
leave other build systems built without engine support.
While engine support probably existed prior to 1.0.1, I decided to play
safe. If someone experience a problem with this, we can widen the
version check.
Fixes#2641Closes#2644
Adds CURLOPT_TLS13_CIPHERS and CURLOPT_PROXY_TLS13_CIPHERS.
curl: added --tls13-ciphers and --proxy-tls13-ciphers
Fixes#2435
Reported-by: zzq1015 on github
Closes#2607
The latest psl is cached in the multi or share handle. It is refreshed
before use after 72 hours.
New share lock CURL_LOCK_DATA_PSL controls the psl cache sharing.
If the latest psl is not available, the builtin psl is used.
Reported-by: Yaakov Selkowitz
Fixes#2553Closes#2601
When receiving REFUSED_STREAM, mark the connection for close and retry
streams accordingly on another/fresh connection.
Reported-by: Terry Wu
Fixes#2416Fixes#1618Closes#2510
If you pass empty user/pass asking curl to use Windows Credential
Storage (as stated in the docs) and it has valid credentials for the
domain, e.g.
curl -v -u : --ntlm example.com
currently authentication fails.
This change fixes it by providing proper SPN string to the SSPI API
calls.
Fixes https://github.com/curl/curl/issues/1622
Closes https://github.com/curl/curl/pull/1660
The ifdefs have become quite long. Also, the condition for the
definition of CURLOPT_SERVICE_NAME and for setting it from
CURLOPT_SERVICE_NAME have diverged. We will soon also need the two
options for NTLM, at least when using SSPI, for
https://github.com/curl/curl/pull/1660.
Just make the definitions unconditional to make that easier.
Closes https://github.com/curl/curl/pull/2479
This patch adds CURLOPT_DNS_SHUFFLE_ADDRESSES to explicitly request
shuffling of IP addresses returned for a hostname when there is more
than one. This is useful when the application knows that a round robin
approach is appropriate and is willing to accept the consequences of
potentially discarding some preference order returned by the system's
implementation.
Closes#1694
- Add new option CURLOPT_RESOLVER_START_FUNCTION to set a callback that
will be called every time before a new resolve request is started
(ie before a host is resolved) with a pointer to backend-specific
resolver data. Currently this is only useful for ares.
- Add new option CURLOPT_RESOLVER_START_DATA to set a user pointer to
pass to the resolver start callback.
Closes https://github.com/curl/curl/pull/2311
- Add new option CURLOPT_HAPPY_EYEBALLS_TIMEOUT to set libcurl's happy
eyeball timeout value.
- Add new optval macro CURL_HET_DEFAULT to represent the default happy
eyeballs timeout value (currently 200 ms).
- Add new tool option --happy-eyeballs-timeout-ms to expose
CURLOPT_HAPPY_EYEBALLS_TIMEOUT. The -ms suffix is used because the
other -timeout options in the tool expect seconds not milliseconds.
Closes https://github.com/curl/curl/pull/2260
... unless CURLOPT_UNRESTRICTED_AUTH is set to allow them. This matches how
curl already handles Authorization headers created internally.
Note: this changes behavior slightly, for the sake of reducing mistakes.
Added test 317 and 318 to verify.
Reported-by: Craig de Stigter
Bug: https://curl.haxx.se/docs/adv_2018-b3bf.html
If the lock is released before the dealings with the bundle is over, it may
have changed by another thread in the mean time.
Fixes#2132Fixes#2151Closes#2139
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>
Originally, my idea was to allocate the two structures (or more
precisely, the connectdata structure and the four SSL backend-specific
strucutres required for ssl[0..1] and proxy_ssl[0..1]) in one go, so
that they all could be free()d together.
However, getting the alignment right is tricky. Too tricky.
So let's just bite the bullet and allocate the SSL backend-specific
data separately.
As a consequence, we now have to be very careful to release the memory
allocated for the SSL backend-specific data whenever we release any
connectdata.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Closes#2119
- Align the array of ssl_backend_data on a max 32 byte boundary.
8 is likely to be ok but I went with 32 for posterity should one of
the ssl_backend_data structs change to contain a larger sized variable
in the future.
Prior to this change (since dev 70f1db3, release 7.56) the connectdata
structure was undersized by 4 bytes in 32-bit builds with ssl enabled
because long long * was mistakenly used for alignment instead of
long long, with the intention being an 8 byte boundary. Also long long
may not be an available type.
The undersized connectdata could lead to oob read/write past the end in
what was expected to be the last 4 bytes of the connection's secondary
socket https proxy ssl_backend_data struct (the secondary socket in a
connection is used by ftp, others?).
Closes https://github.com/curl/curl/issues/2093
CVE-2017-8818
Bug: https://curl.haxx.se/docs/adv_2017-af0a.html
There is a conflict on symbol 'free_func' between openssl/crypto.h and
zlib.h on AIX. This is an attempt to resolve it.
Bug: https://curl.haxx.se/mail/lib-2017-11/0032.html
Reported-By: Michael Felt
This uses the brotli external library (https://github.com/google/brotli).
Brotli becomes a feature: additional curl_version_info() bit and
structure fields are provided for it and CURLVERSION_NOW bumped.
Tests 314 and 315 check Brotli content unencoding with correct and
erroneous data.
Some tests are updated to accomodate with the now configuration dependent
parameters of the Accept-Encoding header.
This is implemented as an output streaming stack of unencoders, the last
calling the client write procedure.
New test 230 checks this feature.
Bug: https://github.com/curl/curl/pull/2002
Reported-By: Daniel Bankhead