If this is the last stream on this connection, the RST_STREAM might not
get pushed to the wire otherwise.
Fixes#2882Closes#2887
Researched-by: Michael Kaufmann
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
This function can get called on a connection that isn't setup enough to
have the 'recv_underlying' function pointer initialized so it would try
to call the NULL pointer.
Reported-by: Dario Weisser
Follow-up to db1b2c7fe9 (never shipped in a release)
Closes#2536
Follow-up to 1514c44655: replace another strstr() call done on a
buffer that might not be zero terminated - with a memchr() call, even if
we know the substring will be found.
Assisted-by: Max Dymond
Detected by OSS-Fuzz
Bug: https://bugs.chromium.org/p/oss-fuzz/issues/detail?id=8021Closes#2534
Fuzzing has proven we can reach code in on_frame_recv with status_code
not having been set, so let's detect that in run-time (instead of with
assert) and error error accordingly.
(This should no longer happen with the latest nghttp2)
Detected by OSS-Fuzz
Bug: https://bugs.chromium.org/p/oss-fuzz/issues/detail?id=7903Closes#2514
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
It's not strictly clear if the API contract allows us to call strstr()
on a string that isn't zero terminated even when we know it will find
the substring, and clang's ASAN check dislikes us for it.
Also added a check of the return code in case it fails, even if I can't
think of a situation how that can trigger.
Detected by OSS-Fuzz
Closes#2513
Bug: https://bugs.chromium.org/p/oss-fuzz/issues/detail?id=7760
This triggered an assert if called more than once in debug mode (and a
memory leak if not debug build). With the right sequence of HTTP/2
headers incoming it can happen.
Detected by OSS-Fuzz
Closes#2507
Bug: https://bugs.chromium.org/p/oss-fuzz/issues/detail?id=7764
If a connection has received a GOAWAY frame while not being used, the
function now reads frames off the connection before trying to reuse it
to avoid reusing connections the server has told us not to use.
Reported-by: Alex Baines
Fixes#1967Closes#2402
Prior to this change the stored byte count of each trailer was
miscalculated and 1 less than required. It appears any trailer
after the first that was passed to Curl_client_write would be truncated
or corrupted as well as the size. Potentially the size of some
subsequent trailer could be erroneously extracted from the contents of
that trailer, and since that size is used by client write an
out-of-bounds read could occur and cause a crash or be otherwise
processed by client write.
The bug appears to have been born in 0761a51 (precedes 7.49.0).
Closes https://github.com/curl/curl/pull/2231
Add a new type of callback to Curl_handler which performs checks on
the connection. Alter RTSP so that it uses this callback to do its
own check on connection health.
mk-lib1521.pl generates a test program (lib1521.c) that calls
curl_easy_setopt() for every known option with a few typical values to
make sure they work (ignoring the return codes).
Some small changes were necessary to avoid asserts and NULL accesses
when doing this.
The perl script needs to be manually rerun when we add new options.
Closes#1543
... since the total amount is low this is faster, easier and reduces
memory overhead.
Also, Curl_expire_done() can now mark an expire timeout as done so that
it never times out.
Closes#1472
A) reduces the timeout lists drastically
B) prevents a lot of superfluous loops for timers that expires "in vain"
when it has actually already been extended to fire later on
This fixes the following clang warnings:
http2.c:184:27: error: no previous extern declaration for non-static
variable 'Curl_handler_http2' [-Werror,-Wmissing-variable-declarations]
http2.c:204:27: error: no previous extern declaration for non-static
variable 'Curl_handler_http2_ssl'
[-Werror,-Wmissing-variable-declarations]
When removing an easy handler from a multi before it completed its
transfer, and it had pushed streams, it would segfault due to the pushed
counted not being cleared.
Fixed-by: zelinchen@users.noreply.github.comFixes#1249
- In Curl_http2_switched don't call memcpy when src is NULL.
Curl_http2_switched can be called like:
Curl_http2_switched(conn, NULL, 0);
.. and prior to this change memcpy was then called like:
memcpy(dest, NULL, 0)
.. causing address sanitizer to warn:
http2.c:2057:3: runtime error: null pointer passed as argument 2, which
is declared to never be null
... by making sure we don't count down the "upload left" counter when the
uploaded size is unknown and then it can be allowed to continue forever.
Fixes#996
With HTTP/2 each transfer is made in an indivial logical stream over the
connection, making most previous errors that caused the connection to get
forced-closed now instead just kill the stream and not the connection.
Fixes#941
Since the server can at any time send a HTTP/2 frame to us, we need to
wait for the socket to be readable during all transfers so that we can
act on incoming frames even when uploading etc.
Reminded-by: Tatsuhiro Tsujikawa
After a few wasted hours hunting down the reason for slowness during a
TLS handshake that turned out to be because of TCP_NODELAY not being
set, I think we have enough motivation to toggle the default for this
option. We now enable TCP_NODELAY by default and allow applications to
switch it off.
This also makes --tcp-nodelay unnecessary, but --no-tcp-nodelay can be
used to disable it.
Thanks-to: Tim Rühsen
Bug: https://curl.haxx.se/mail/lib-2016-06/0143.html
Previously, passing a timeout of zero to Curl_expire() was a magic code
for clearing all timeouts for the handle. That is now instead made with
the new Curl_expire_clear() function and thus a 0 timeout is fine to set
and will trigger a timeout ASAP.
This will help removing short delays, in particular notable when doing
HTTP/2.
curl's representation of HTTP/2 responses involves transforming the
response to a format that is similar to HTTP/1.1. Prior to this change,
curl would do this by separating header names and values with only a
colon, without introducing a space after the colon.
While this is technically a valid way to represent a HTTP/1.1 header
block, it is much more common to see a space following the colon. This
change introduces that space, to ensure that incautious tools are safely
able to parse the header block.
This also ensures that the difference between the HTTP/1.1 and HTTP/2
response layout is as minimal as possible.
Bug: https://github.com/curl/curl/issues/797Closes#798Fixes#797
curl_printf.h defines printf to curl_mprintf, etc. This can cause
problems with external headers which may use
__attribute__((format(printf, ...))) markers etc.
To avoid that they cause problems with system includes, we include
curl_printf.h after any system headers. That makes the three last
headers to always be, and we keep them in this order:
curl_printf.h
curl_memory.h
memdebug.h
None of them include system headers, they all do funny #defines.
Reported-by: David Benjamin
Fixes#743
- Error if a header line is larger than supported.
- Warn if cumulative header line length may be larger than supported.
- Allow spaces when parsing the path component.
- Make sure each header line ends in \r\n. This fixes an out of bounds.
- Disallow header continuation lines until we decide what to do.
Ref: https://github.com/curl/curl/issues/659
Ref: https://github.com/curl/curl/pull/663
This commit ensures that streams which was closed in on_stream_close
callback gets passed to http2_handle_stream_close. Previously, this
might not happen. To achieve this, we increment drain property to
forcibly call recv function for that stream.
To more accurately check that we have no pending event before shutting
down HTTP/2 session, we sum up drain property into
http_conn.drain_total. We only shutdown session if that value is 0.
With this commit, when stream was closed before reading response
header fields, error code CURLE_HTTP2_STREAM is returned even if
HTTP/2 level error is NO_ERROR. This signals the upper layer that
stream was closed by error just like TCP connection close in HTTP/1.
Ref: https://github.com/curl/curl/issues/659
Ref: https://github.com/curl/curl/pull/663
This commit ensures that data from network are processed before HTTP/2
session is terminated. This is achieved by pausing nghttp2 whenever
different stream than current easy handle receives data.
This commit also fixes the bug that sometimes processing hangs when
multiple HTTP/2 streams are multiplexed.
Ref: https://github.com/curl/curl/issues/659
Ref: https://github.com/curl/curl/pull/663
Previously, when a stream was closed with other than NGHTTP2_NO_ERROR
by RST_STREAM, underlying TCP connection was dropped. This is
undesirable since there may be other streams multiplexed and they are
very much fine. This change introduce new error code
CURLE_HTTP2_STREAM, which indicates stream error that only affects the
relevant stream, and connection should be kept open. The existing
CURLE_HTTP2 means connection error in general.
Ref: https://github.com/curl/curl/issues/659
Ref: https://github.com/curl/curl/pull/663
... but ignore EAGAIN if the stream has ended so that we don't end up in
a loop. This is a follow-up to c8ab613 in order to avoid the problem
d261652 was made to fix.
Reported-by: Jay Satiro
Clues-provided-by: Tatsuhiro Tsujikawa
Discussed in #750
It turns out the google GFE HTTP/2 servers send a PING frame immediately
after a stream ends and its last DATA has been received by curl. So if
we don't drain that from the socket, it makes the socket readable in
subsequent checks and libcurl then (wrongly) assumes the connection is
dead when trying to reuse the connection.
Reported-by: Joonas Kuorilehto
Discussed in #750
It offers extra info from nghttp2 in certain error cases. Like for
example when trying prior-knowledge http2 on a server that doesn't speak
http2 at all. The error message is passed on as a verbose message to
libcurl.
Discussed in #722
The error callback was added in nghttp2 1.9.0
Since commit a5aec58 the handler schemes need to match for the
connections to be reused and for HTTP/2 multiplexing to work, reusing
connections is very important!
Closes#736
Check that the trailer buffer exists before attempting a client write
for trailers on stream close.
Refer to comments in https://github.com/bagder/curl/pull/564
This commit adds trailer support in HTTP/2. In HTTP/1.1, chunked
encoding must be used to send trialer fields. HTTP/2 deprecated any
trandfer-encoding, including chunked. But trailer fields are now
always available.
Since trailer fields are relatively rare these days (gRPC uses them
extensively though), allocating buffer for trailer fields is done when
we detect that HEADERS frame containing trailer fields is started. We
use Curl_add_buffer_* functions to buffer all trailers, just like we
do for regular header fields. And then deliver them when stream is
closed. We have to be careful here so that all data are delivered to
upper layer before sending trailers to the application.
We can deliver trailer field one by one using NGHTTP2_ERR_PAUSE
mechanism, but current method is far more simple.
Another possibility is use chunked encoding internally for HTTP/2
traffic. I have not tested it, but it could add another overhead.
Closes#564
When NGHTTP2_ERR_PAUSE is returned from data_source_read_callback, we
might not process DATA frame fully. Calling nghttp2_session_mem_recv()
again will continue to process DATA frame, but if there is no incoming
frames, then we have to call it again with 0-length data. Without this,
on_stream_close callback will not be called, and stream could be hanged.
Bug: http://curl.haxx.se/mail/lib-2015-11/0103.html
Reported-by: Francisco Moraes
They tend to never get updated anyway so they're frequently inaccurate
and we never go back to revisit them anyway. We document issues to work
on properly in KNOWN_BUGS and TODO instead.