Depend on the known behaviour of URLs for nonexistent files rather than
the undefined behaviour of URLs for directories (which fails on Windows).
The test isn't about file: URLs at all, so the URL used doesn't really
matter.
If a % ended the statement, the string's trailing NUL would be skipped
and memory past the end of the buffer would be accessed and potentially
displayed as part of the --write-out output. Added tests 1440 and 1441
to check for this kind of condition.
Reported-by: Brian Carpenter
- Add new option CURLOPT_SUPPRESS_CONNECT_HEADERS to allow suppressing
proxy CONNECT response headers from the user callback functions
CURLOPT_HEADERFUNCTION and CURLOPT_WRITEFUNCTION.
- Add new tool option --suppress-connect-headers to expose
CURLOPT_SUPPRESS_CONNECT_HEADERS and allow suppressing proxy CONNECT
response headers from --dump-header and --include.
Assisted-by: Jay Satiro
Assisted-by: CarloCannas@users.noreply.github.com
Closes https://github.com/curl/curl/pull/783
A client MUST ignore any Content-Length or Transfer-Encoding header
fields received in a successful response to CONNECT.
"Successful" described as: 2xx (Successful). RFC 7231 4.3.6
Prior to this change such a case would cause an error.
In some ways this bug appears to be a regression since c50b878. Prior to
that libcurl may have appeared to function correctly in such cases by
acting on those headers instead of causing an error. But that behavior
was also incorrect.
Bug: https://github.com/curl/curl/issues/1317
Reported-by: mkzero@users.noreply.github.com
Test 1903 is doing HTTP pipelining, and that is a timing and ordering
sensitive operation and this fails far too often on the Travis CI
leading to people more or less ignoring test failures there. Not good.
The end of pipelning is probably coming sooner rather than later
anyway...
... because it causes confusion with users. Example URLs:
"http://[127.0.0.1]:11211:80" which a lot of languages' URL parsers will
parse and claim uses port number 80, while libcurl would use port number
11211.
"http://user@example.com:80@localhost" which by the WHATWG URL spec will
be treated to contain user name 'user@example.com' but according to
RFC3986 is user name 'user' for the host 'example.com' and then port 80
is followed by "@localhost"
Both these formats are now rejected, and verified so in test 1260.
Reported-by: Orange Tsai
This is likely to be the case when building from a tar ball release
package which includes a prebuilt man page. In that case, test the
packaged man page instead. This only makes a difference when building
out-of-tree (in-tree, the location in both cases is identical).
The character set in POSIX is set by the locale defined by (in
decreasing order of precedence) the LC_ALL, LC_CTYPE and LANG
environment variables (CHARSET was used by libidn but not libidn2).
LC_ALL is cleared to ensure that LC_CTYPE takes effect, but LC_ALL is
not used to set the locale to ensure that other parts of the locale
aren't overridden. Since there doesn't seem to be a cross-platform way
of specifying a UTF-8 locale, and not all systems may support UTF-8, a
<precheck> is used to skip the test if UTF-8 can't be verified to be
available. Test 1035 was also converted to UTF-8 for consistency, as
the actual character set used there is irrelevant to the test.
This patch uses a different UTF-8 locale than the last attempt, namely
en_US.UTF-8. This one has been verified on 7 different Linux and BSD
distributions and is more complete and usable than the locale UTF-8 (on
at least some systems).
This reverts commit ecd1d020ab.
That commit caused test failures on my Debian Linux machine for all
changed test cases. We need to reconsider how that should get done.
Character set in POSIX is set by the locale defined (in decreasing order
of precedence) by the LC_ALL, LC_CTYPE and LANG environment variables (I
believe CHARSET is only historic). LC_ALL is cleared to ensure that
LC_CTYPE takes effect, but LC_ALL is not used to set the locale to
ensure that other parts of the locale aren't overriden, if set. Since
there doesn't seem to be a cross-platform way of specifying a UTF-8
locale, and not all systems may support UTF-8, a <precheck> is used
(where relevant) to skip the test if UTF-8 isn't in use. Test 1035 was
also converted to UTF-8 for consistency, as the actual character set
used there is irrelevant to the test.
- on the first invocation: keep security context returned by
InitializeSecurityContext()
- on subsequent invocations: use MakeSignature() instead of
InitializeSecurityContext() to generate HTTP digest response
Bug: https://github.com/curl/curl/issues/870
Reported-by: Andreas Roth
Closes https://github.com/curl/curl/pull/1251
Properly resolve, convert and log the proxy host names.
Support the "--connect-to" feature for SOCKS proxies and for passive FTP
data transfers.
Follow-up to cb4e2be
Reported-by: Jay Satiro
Fixes https://github.com/curl/curl/issues/1248
- While negotiating auth during PUT/POST if a user-specified
Content-Length header is set send 'Content-Length: 0'.
This is what we do already in HTTPREQ_POST_FORM and what we did in the
HTTPREQ_POST case (regression since afd288b).
Prior to this change no Content-Length header would be sent in such a
case.
Bug: https://curl.haxx.se/mail/lib-2017-02/0006.html
Reported-by: Dominik Hölzl
Closes https://github.com/curl/curl/pull/1242
This repairs cookies for localhost.
Non-PSL builds will now only accept "localhost" without dots, while PSL
builds okeys everything not listed as PSL.
Added test 1258 to verify.
This was a regression brought in a76825a5ef
Under condition using http_proxy env var, noproxy list was the
combination of --noproxy option and NO_PROXY env var previously. Since
this commit, --noproxy option overrides NO_PROXY environment variable
even if use http_proxy env var.
Closes#1140
The combination of --noproxy option and http_proxy env var works well
both for proxied hosts and non-proxied hosts.
However, when combining NO_PROXY env var with --proxy option,
non-proxied hosts are not reachable while proxied host is OK.
This patch allows us to access non-proxied hosts even if using NO_PROXY
env var with --proxy option.
Follow-up to 3463408.
Prior to 3463408 file:// hostnames were silently stripped.
Prior to this commit it did not work when a schemeless url was used with
file as the default protocol.
Ref: https://curl.haxx.se/mail/lib-2016-11/0081.html
Closes https://github.com/curl/curl/pull/1124
Also fix for drive letters:
- Support --proto-default file c:/foo/bar.txt
- Support file://c:/foo/bar.txt
- Fail when a file:// drive letter is detected and not MSDOS/Windows.
Bug: https://github.com/curl/curl/issues/1187
Reported-by: Anatol Belski
Assisted-by: Anatol Belski