Fixed some issues that caused xmllint failures, added features
and keywords, fixed some quotes and removed some <strip> sections
that unnecessarily limited test checking.
Introduced in the initial gopher commits, there was added logic to do
GOPHER test serving in the pingpong server but as it resembles HTTP much
more than FTP or SMTP, the gopher testing has been moved over to instead
use the sws (HTTP) server. This change simply removes unused code.
The fix for the busyloop really only is a temporary work-around. It
causes a BLOCKING behavior which is a NO-NO. This function should rather
be split up in a do and a doing piece where the pieces that aren't
possible to send now will be sent in the doing function repeatedly until
the entire request is sent.
HTTP allows that a server sends trailing headers after all the chunks
have been sent WITHOUT signalling their presence in the first response
headers. The "Trailer:" header is only a SHOULD there and as we need to
handle the situation even without that header I made libcurl ignore
Trailer: completely.
Test case 1116 was added to verify this and to make sure we handle more
than one trailer header properly.
Reported by: Patrick McManus
Bug: http://curl.haxx.se/bug/view.cgi?id=3052450
It was introduced in commit eeb2cb05 along with the -F type=
change. Also fixed a typo in the name of the magic filename=
parameter. Tweaked tests 39 and 173 to better test this path.
The numerical value passed to CURLOPT_RESUME_FROM for FTP uploads is
interpreted and used as position where to resume the _reading_ of the
local file and it will "blindly" append that data on the remote
file. This was certainly not clear in the docs previously.
Reported by: catalin
Bug: http://curl.haxx.se/bug/view.cgi?id=3048174
The -F option allows some custom parameters within the given string, and
those strings are separated with semicolons. You can for example specify
"name=daniel;type=text/plain" to set content-type for the
field. However, the use of semicolons like that made it not work fine if
you specified one within the content-type, like for:
"name=daniel;type=text/plain;charset=UTF-8"
... as the second one would be seen as a separator and "charset" is no
parameter curl knows anything about so it was just silently discarded.
The new logic now checks if the semicolon and following keyword looks
like a parameter it knows about and if it isn't it is assumed to be
meant to be used within the content-type string itself.
I modified test case 186 to verify that this works as intended.
Reported by: Larry Stone
Bug: http://curl.haxx.se/bug/view.cgi?id=3048988
The script works exactly same as the Perl one except for one thing:
when the text descriptions generated with openssl are included then
the md5 fingerprints are missing; seems openssl has either a bug or
a feature which prints the md5 fingerprint output to stdout instead
of writing them to specified file; this script could here do the same
as what the Perl scripr does (redirect stdout into file) but this
makes the script take up double the time because it needs to launch
cmd.exe 140 times (fo each openssl call). So I think for now we just
ommit the md5 fingerprints, and see if openssl will be fixed.
It seems that its time to look at some better ideas for the win32
non-configure builds; probably a prebuild target which copies
config-win32.h to curl_config.h and appends also then feature
defines like USE_ARES.
The 66 bytes checked are those 38 bytes with the chunked encoding
headers added: 8+8+10+35+5 = 66
The three-letter words become 8 bytes on the wire because they are sent
like: "3\r\none\r\n"
... and there's the trailing 5 bytes write after the four lines since
the final chunk is sent (which is "0\r\n\r\n").
I fell over this bug report that mentioned that libcurl could wrongly
send more than one complete messages at the end of a transfer. Reading
the code confirmed this, so I've added a new multi state to make it not
happen. The mentioned bug report was made by Brad Jorsch but is (oddly
enough) filed in Debian's bug tracker for the "wmweather+" tool.
Bug: http://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=593390
In some situations, libtool will change directories and perform
a link step before executing the libtest test app. Since
LD_PRELOAD is in effect for this entire process, the path to the
binary must be absolute so it will be valid no matter in which
directory the app is running.
There's an error in http_negotiation.c where a mistake is using only
userpwd even for proxy requests. Ludek provided a patch, but I decided
to write the fix slightly different using his patch as inspiration.
Reported by: Ludek Finstrle
Bug: http://curl.haxx.se/bug/view.cgi?id=3046066
When detecting that the send or recv speed, the multi interface changes
state to TOOFAST and previously there was no timeout set that would
force a recheck but it would rely on the application to somehow call
libcurl anyway. This now sets a timeout for a suitable future time to
check again if the average transfer speed is then below the threshold
again.
Curl_expire() is now expanded to hold a list of timeouts for each easy
handle. Only the closest in time will be the one used as the primary
timeout for the handle and will be used for the splay tree (which sorts
and lists all handles within the multi handle).
When the main timeout has triggered/expired, the next timeout in time
that is kept in the list will be moved to the main timeout position and
used as the key to splay with. This way, all timeouts that are set with
Curl_expire() internally will end up as a proper timeout. Previously any
Curl_expire() that set a _later_ timeout than what was already set was
just silently ignored and thus missed.
Setting Curl_expire() with timeout 0 (zero) will cancel all previously
added timeouts.
Corrects known bug #62.