It tries hard to recognise SDK's on different platforms. On windows MIT
Kerberos installs SDK with other things and puts path into registry.
Heimdal have separate zip archive. On linux pkg-config is tried, then
krb5-config script and finally old-style libs and headers detection.
Command line args:
* CMAKE_USE_GSSAPI - enables GSSAPI detection
* GSS_ROOT_DIR - if set, should point to the root of GSSAPI installation
(the one with include and lib directories)
There is no need for such function. Include_directories propagate by
themselves and having a function with one simple link statement makes
little sense.
Because we prepended libraries to list, CMake had troubles resolving
link directory order as it detected some cycles. Appending to list ensures
that dependencies will preceed dependees.
OpenLDAP might have been build with OpenSSL. Checking for OpenLDAP first
may result in undefined symbols. Of course, the found OpenSSL libraries
must also be linked whenever OpenLDAP is.
Coverity CID 252518. This function is in general far too complicated for
its own good and really should be broken down into several smaller
funcitons instead - but I'm adding this protection here now since it
seems there's a risk the code flow can end up here and dereference a
NULL pointer.
Coverity CID 1241957. Removed the unused argument. As this struct and
pointer now are used only for krb5, there's no need to keep unused
function arguments around.
Coverity CID 1243583. get_url_file_name() cannot fail and return a NULL
file name pointer so skip the check for that - it tricks coverity into
believing it can happen and it then warns later on when we use 'outfile'
without checking for NULL.
Option --pinnedpubkey takes a path to a public key in DER format and
only connect if it matches (currently only implemented with OpenSSL).
Provides CURLOPT_PINNEDPUBLICKEY for curl_easy_setopt().
Extract a public RSA key from a website like so:
openssl s_client -connect google.com:443 2>&1 < /dev/null | \
sed -n '/-----BEGIN/,/-----END/p' | openssl x509 -noout -pubkey \
| openssl rsa -pubin -outform DER > google.com.der
Coverity CID 1154198. This NULL check implies that the pointer _can_ be
NULL at this point, which it can't. Thus it is dead code. It tricks
static analyzers to warn about dereferencing the pointer since the code
seems to imply it can be NULL.
Coverify CID 1157776. Removed a superfluous if() that always evaluated
true (and an else clause that never ran), and then re-indented the
function accordingly.
Coverity CID 1215284. The server name is extracted with
Curl_copy_header_value() and passed in to this function, and
copy_header_value can actually can fail and return NULL.
For private keys, use the first match from: user-specified key file
(if provided), ~/.ssh/id_rsa, ~/.ssh/id_dsa, ./id_rsa, ./id_dsa
Note that the previous code only looked for id_dsa files. id_rsa is
now generally preferred, as it supports larger key sizes.
For public keys, use the user-specified key file, if provided.
Otherwise, try to extract the public key from the private key file.
This means that passing --pubkey is typically no longer required,
and makes the key-handling behavior more like OpenSSH.
Coverity CID 1202836. If the proxy environment variable returned an empty
string, it would be leaked. While an empty string is not really a proxy, other
logic in this function already allows a blank string to be returned so allow
that here to avoid the leak.
Coverity CID 1215287. There's a potential risk for a memory leak in
here, and moving the free call to be unconditional seems like a cheap
price to remove the risk.
Coverity CID 1215296. There's a potential risk for a memory leak in
here, and moving the free call to be unconditional seems like a cheap
price to remove the risk.
Coverity detected this. CID 1241954. When Curl_poll() returns a negative value
'mcode' was uninitialized. Pretty harmless since this is debug code only and
would at worst cause an error to _not_ be returned...
Mostly because we use C strings and they end at a binary zero so we know
we can't open a file name using an embedded binary zero.
Reported-by: research@g0blin.co.uk