A common set of functions instead of many separate implementations for
creating buffers that can grow when appending data to them. Existing
functionality has been ported over.
In my early basic testing, the total number of allocations seem at
roughly the same amount as before, possibly a few less.
See docs/DYNBUF.md for a description of the API.
Closes#5300
This reduces the HTTP/2 window size to 32 MB since libcurl might have to
buffer up to this amount of data in memory and yet we don't want it set
lower to potentially impact tranfer performance on high speed networks.
Requires nghttp2 commit b3f85e2daa629
(https://github.com/nghttp2/nghttp2/pull/1444) to work properly, to end
up in the next release after 1.40.0.
Fixes#4939Closes#4940
It could accidentally let the connection get used by more than one
thread, leading to double-free and more.
Reported-by: Christopher Reid
Fixes#4544Closes#4557
There were a leftover few prototypes of Curl_ functions that we used to
export but no longer do, this removes those prototypes and cleans up any
comments still referring to them.
Curl_write32_le(), Curl_strcpy_url(), Curl_strlen_url(), Curl_up_free()
Curl_concat_url(), Curl_detach_connnection(), Curl_http_setup_conn()
were made static in 05b100aee2.
Curl_http_perhapsrewind() made static in 574aecee20.
For the remainder, I didn't trawl the Git logs hard enough to capture
their exact time of deletion, but they were all gone: Curl_splayprint(),
Curl_http2_send_request(), Curl_global_host_cache_dtor(),
Curl_scan_cache_used(), Curl_hostcache_destroy(), Curl_second_connect(),
Curl_http_auth_stage() and Curl_close_connections().
Closes#4096
Reviewed-by: Daniel Stenberg <daniel@haxx.se>
urlapi: turn three local-only functions into statics
conncache: make conncache_find_first_connection static
multi: make detach_connnection static
connect: make getaddressinfo static
curl_ntlm_core: make hmac_md5 static
http2: make two functions static
http: make http_setup_conn static
connect: make tcpnodelay static
tests: make UNITTEST a thing to mark functions with, so they can be static for
normal builds and non-static for unit test builds
... and mark Curl_shuffle_addr accordingly.
url: make up_free static
setopt: make vsetopt static
curl_endian: make write32_le static
rtsp: make rtsp_connisdead static
warnless: remove unused functions
memdebug: remove one unused function, made another static
This is a companion patch to cbea2fd2c (NTLM: force the connection to
HTTP/1.1, 2018-12-06): with NTLM, we can switch to HTTP/1.1
preemptively. However, with other (Negotiate) authentication it is not
clear to this developer whether there is a way to make it work with
HTTP/2, so let's try HTTP/2 first and fall back in case we encounter the
error HTTP_1_1_REQUIRED.
Note: we will still keep the NTLM workaround, as it avoids an extra
round trip.
Daniel Stenberg helped a lot with this patch, in particular by
suggesting to introduce the Curl_h2_http_1_1_error() function.
Closes#3349
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
- replace tabs with spaces where possible
- remove line ending spaces
- remove double/triple newlines at EOF
- fix a non-UTF-8 character
- cleanup a few indentations/line continuations
in manual examples
Closes https://github.com/curl/curl/pull/3037
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
Previously if HTTP/2 traffic is appended to HTTP Upgrade response header
(thus they are in the same buffer), the trailing HTTP/2 traffic is not
processed and lost. The appended data is most likely SETTINGS frame.
If it is lost, nghttp2 library complains server does not obey the HTTP/2
protocol and issues GOAWAY frame and curl eventually drops connection.
This commit fixes this problem and now trailing data is processed.
1 - fixes the warnings when built without http2 support
2 - adds CURLE_HTTP2, a new error code for errors detected by nghttp2
basically when they are about http2 specific things.