While being debated (in #716) and a violation of RFC 7230 section 5.4,
this test verifies that the existing functionality works as intended. It
strips the dot from the host name and uses the host without dot
throughout the internals.
... for checking ability to receive full HTTP response when POST request
is used with slow read callback function.
This test checks for bug #657 and verifies the work-around from
72d5e144fb.
Closes#720
warning: implicit declaration of function 'sprintf_was_used'
[-Wimplicit-function-declaration]
Follow up to the modications made to tests/libtest in commit 55452ebdff
as we prefer not to use sprintf() now.
The define is not in our name space and is therefore not protected by
our API promises.
It was only really used by libcurl internals but was mostly erased from
there already in 8aabbf5 (March 2015). This is supposedly the final
death blow to that define from everywhere.
As a side-effect, making sure _MPRINTF_REPLACE is gone and not used, I
made the lib tests in tests/libtest/ use curl_printf.h for its redefine
magic and then subsequently the use of sprintf() got banned in the tests
as well (as it is in libcurl internals) and I then replaced them all
with snprintf().
In the unlikely event that any users is actually using this define and
gets sad by this change, it is very easily copied to the user's own
code.
Fixed failed redirection of stderr with some options. At least on Msys2,
perl fails to redirect stderr if $value contains newline or other weird
characters.
It seems we may have some autobuild problems after this commit went
in. Trying to see if a revert helps to get them back.
This reverts commit 2716350d1f.
RFC 6265 section 4.1.1 spells out that the first name/value pair in the
header is the actual cookie name and content, while the following are
the parameters.
libcurl previously had a more liberal approach which causes significant
problems when introducing new cookie parameters, like the suggested new
cookie priority draft.
The previous logic read all n/v pairs from left-to-right and the first
name used that wassn't a known parameter name would be used as the
cookie name, thus accepting "Set-Cookie: Max-Age=2; person=daniel" to be
a cookie named 'person' while an RFC 6265 compliant parser should
consider that to be a cookie named 'Max-Age' with an (unknown) parameter
'person'.
Fixes#709
DSA is no longer supported by OpenSSH 7.0, which causes all SCP/SFTP
test cases to be skipped. Using RSA for host authentication works with
both old and new versions of OpenSSH.
Reported-by: Karlson2k
Closes#676
- Add tests.
- Add an example to CURLOPT_TFTP_NO_OPTIONS.3.
- Add --tftp-no-options to expose CURLOPT_TFTP_NO_OPTIONS.
Bug: https://github.com/curl/curl/issues/481
It turns out Firefox and Chrome both allow spaces in cookie names and
there are sites out there using that.
Turned out the code meant to strip off trailing space from cookie names
didn't work. Fixed now.
Test case 8 modified to verify both these changes.
Closes#639
- Add unit test 1604 to test the sanitize_file_name function.
- Use -DCURL_STATICLIB when building libcurltool for unit testing.
- Better detection of reserved DOS device names.
- New flags to modify sanitize behavior:
SANITIZE_ALLOW_COLONS: Allow colons
SANITIZE_ALLOW_PATH: Allow path separators and colons
SANITIZE_ALLOW_RESERVED: Allow reserved device names
SANITIZE_ALLOW_TRUNCATE: Allow truncating a long filename
- Restore sanitization of banned characters from user-specified outfile.
Prior to this commit sanitization of a user-specified outfile was
temporarily disabled in 2b6dadc because there was no way to allow path
separators and colons through while replacing other banned characters.
Now in such a case we call the sanitize function with
SANITIZE_ALLOW_PATH which allows path separators and colons to pass
through.
Closes https://github.com/curl/curl/issues/624
Reported-by: Octavio Schroeder
It isn't used by the code in current conditions but for safety it seems
sensible to at least not crash on such input.
Extended unit test 1395 to verify this too as well as a plain "/" input.
Before this patch, if a URL does not start with the protocol
name/scheme, effective URLs would be prefixed with upper-case protocol
names/schemes. This behavior might not be expected by library users or
end users.
For example, if `CURLOPT_DEFAULT_PROTOCOL` is set to "https". And the
URL is "hostname/path". The effective URL would be
"HTTPS://hostname/path" instead of "https://hostname/path".
After this patch, effective URLs would be prefixed with a lower-case
protocol name/scheme.
Closes#597
Signed-off-by: Mohammad AlSaleh <CE.Mohammad.AlSaleh@gmail.com>