It doesn't benefit us much as the connection could get closed at
any time, and also by checking we lose the ability to determine
if the socket was closed by reading zero bytes.
Reported-by: Michael Kaufmann
Closes https://github.com/curl/curl/pull/1134
This is the first time we replace the manually edited curt.1 with the
generated one created by gen.pl and the individual option documentation
pages.
Do not edit this file, edit the individual pages and regenerate this
output.
This file will be generated by the build system soon and then removed
from git.
CURLOPT_SOCKS_PROXY -> CURLOPT_PRE_PROXY
Added the corresponding --preroxy command line option. Sets a SOCKS
proxy to connect to _before_ connecting to a HTTP(S) proxy.
... the newly introduced CURLOPT_SOCKS_PROXY is special and should be
asked for specially. (Needs new code.)
Unified proxy type to a single variable in the config struct.
This was added as part of the SOCKS+HTTPS proxy merge but there's no
need to support this as we prefer to have the protocol specified as a
prefix instead.
ERR_PACK is an internal detail of OpenSSL. Also, when using it, a
function name must be specified which is overly specific: the test will
break whenever OpenSSL internally change things so that a different
function creates the error.
Closes#1157
Since it now reads responses one byte a time, a loop could be removed
and it is no longer limited to get the whole response within 16K, it is
now instead only limited to 16K maximum header line lengths.
... so that it doesn't read data that is actually coming from the
remote. 2xx responses have no body from the proxy, that data is from the
peer.
Fixes#1132
A server MUST NOT send any Transfer-Encoding or Content-Length header
fields in a 2xx (Successful) response to CONNECT. (RFC 7231 section
4.3.6)
Also fixes the three test cases that did this.
If a port number in a "connect-to" entry does not match, skip this
entry instead of connecting to port 0.
If a port number in a "connect-to" entry matches, use this entry
and look no further.
Reported-by: Jay Satiro
Assisted-by: Jay Satiro, Daniel Stenberg
Closes#1148