WinSock select() does not support standard file descriptors,
it can only check SOCKETs. The following function is an attempt
to create a select() function with support for other handles.
BLANK_AT_MAKETIME may be used in our Makefile.am files to blank
LIBS variable used in generated makefile at makefile processing
time. Doing this functionally prevents LIBS from being used for
all link targets in given makefile.
Since automake 1.12.4, the warnings are issued on running automake:
warning: 'INCLUDES' is the old name for 'AM_CPPFLAGS' (or '*_CPPFLAGS')
Avoid INCLUDES and roll these flags into AM_CPPFLAGS.
Compile tested on:
Ubuntu 10.04 (automake 1:1.11.1-1)
Ubuntu 12.04 (automake 1:1.11.3-1ubuntu2)
Arch Linux (automake 1.12.4)
Fix a bug where closed sockets (fd -1) were left in the all_sockets
list, because of missing parens in a pointer arithmetic expression
Reenable the tests that were locking up due to this bug.
SO_KEEPALIVE flag to all sockets. Note that several loops which used to continue on a return value
of 0 (theoretical since 0 would never be returned without O_NONBLOCK) now break on 0 so that they
won't continue reading until after poll is called again.
for non-blocking sockets: now -1 means error or connection finished, 1 means data was read, and 0
means there is no data available now so need to wait for poll (new return value)
half-finished.
Note the the req struct used to be re-initialized AFTER reading pipeline data, so now that we
initialize it from the caller we must be careful not to overwrite the pipeline data.
Also we now need to handle the case where the buffer is already full when get_request is called -
previously this never happened as it was always called with an empty buffer and looped until done.
Now get_request is called in a loop, so the next step is to run the loop on a socket only when poll
signals it is readable.
I made "connmon" not get initialized properly before use, and I use the
big hammer and make sure we always clear the entire struct to avoid any
problem like this in the future.
This makes verifying easier and makes us more sure curl closes the
connection only at the correct point in time. Adjusted test 206 and 1008
accordingly and updated the docs for it.
I moved out the servercmd parsing into a its own function called
parse_servercmd() and made sure it gets used also when the test number
is extracted from CONNECT requests. It turned out sws didn't do that
previously!
Using this, the server will output in the protocol log when the
connection gets disconnected and thus we will verify correctly in the
test cases that the connection doesn't get closed prematurely. This is
important for example NTLM to work.
Documentation added to FILEFORMAT, test 503 updated to use this.
There's a new 'http-proxy' server for tests that runs on a separate port
and lets clients do HTTP CONNECT to other ports on the same host to
allow us to test HTTP "tunneling" properly.
Test cases now have a <proxy> section in <verify> to check that the
proxy protocol part matches correctly.
Test case 80, 83, 95, 275, 503 and 1078 have been converted. Test 1316
was added.
Some torture tests left FTP test server in an unresponsive state, resulting
in torture tests that actually completed following unexpected code paths.
Changes in this commit solely address this issue and some adjustments for
ftpserver.pl logging relative to data channel establishment and tear down.
Pending NODATACONN relative adjustments reserved for a further commit.
When, for a given test, server is instructed to close connection after
server reply we now wait a very small amount of time (50ms) before doing
so. This is done to allow client to, at least partially, read server
reply before getting an ECONNRESET.
The above is required to make test cases 1070, 1200, 1201 and 1202 pass
with Cygwin 1.5.X on W2K.
GOPHER test server closes connection after _every_ server-reply, as such,
at some point it could require a bigger time or using shutdown() before
a server-side initiated disconnection.
Previous interfaces for these libcurl internal functions did not allow to tell
apart a legitimate zero size result from an error condition. These functions
now return a CURLcode indicating function success or otherwise specific error.
Output size is returned using a pointer argument.
All usage of these two functions, and others closely related, has been adapted
to the new interfaces. Relative error and OOM handling adapted or added where
missing. Unit test 1302 also adapted.