In DarwinSSL the SSLSetPeerDomainName function is used to enable both
sending SNI and verifying the host. When host verification is disabled
the function cannot be called, therefore SNI is disabled as well.
Closes https://github.com/curl/curl/pull/1240
- Change CURLOPT_PROXY_CAPATH to return CURLE_NOT_BUILT_IN if the option
is not supported, which is the same as what we already do for
CURLOPT_CAPATH.
- Change the curl tool to handle CURLOPT_PROXY_CAPATH error
CURLE_NOT_BUILT_IN as a warning instead of as an error, which is the
same as what we already do for CURLOPT_CAPATH.
- Fix CAPATH docs to show that CURLE_NOT_BUILT_IN is returned when the
respective CAPATH option is not supported by the SSL library.
Ref: https://github.com/curl/curl/pull/1257
Builds with axTLS 2.1.2. This then also breaks compatibility with axTLS
< 2.1.0 (the older API)
... and fix the session_id mixup brought in 04b4ee549Fixes#1220
- Document in --socks* opts they're still mutually exclusive of --proxy.
Partial revert of 423a93c; I had misinterpreted the SOCKS proxy +
HTTP/HTTPS proxy combination.
- Document in --socks* opts that --preproxy can be used to specify a
SOCKS proxy at the same time --proxy is used with an HTTP/HTTPS proxy.
On Windows it's possible to have input files with CRLF line endings and
a perl that defaults to LF line endings (eg msysgit). Currently that
results in generator output of mixed line endings of CR, LF and CRLF.
This change fixes that issue in the most succinct way by opening the
files in :crlf text mode even when the perl being used does not default
to that mode. (On operating systems that don't have a separate text mode
it's essentially a no-op.) The output continues to be in the perl's
native line ending.
Replace use of fixed macro BUFSIZE to define the size of the receive
buffer. Reappropriate CURLOPT_BUFFERSIZE to include enlarging receive
buffer size. Upon setting, resize buffer if larger than the current
default size up to a MAX_BUFSIZE (512KB). This can benefit protocols
like SFTP.
Closes#1222
In addition to unix domain sockets, Linux also supports an
abstract namespace which is independent of the filesystem.
In order to support it, add new CURLOPT_ABSTRACT_UNIX_SOCKET
option which uses the same storage as CURLOPT_UNIX_SOCKET_PATH
internally, along with a flag to specify abstract socket.
On non-supporting platforms, the abstract address will be
interpreted as an empty string and fail gracefully.
Also add new --abstract-unix-socket tool parameter.
Signed-off-by: Isaac Boukris <iboukris@gmail.com>
Reported-by: Chungtsun Li (typeless)
Reviewed-by: Daniel Stenberg
Reviewed-by: Peter Wu
Closes#1197Fixes#1061