- Reorder some internal struct members so that less padding is used.
This is an attempt at saving a bit of space by packing some structs
(using pahole to find the holes) where it might make sense to do
so without losing readability.
I.e., I tried to avoid separating fields that seem grouped
together (like the cwd... fields in struct ftp_conn for instance).
Also abstained from touching fields behind conditional macros as
that quickly can get complicated.
Closes https://github.com/curl/curl/pull/6483
... instead of having it static within the Curl_easy struct. This takes
away 1176 bytes (18%) from the Curl_easy struct that aren't used very
often and instead makes the code allocate it when needed.
Closes#6492
The SOCKS code now uses the generic download buffer for temporary
storage during the connection procedure, instead of having its own
private 600 byte buffer that adds to the connectdata struct size. This
works fine because this point the buffer is allocated but is not use for
download yet since the connection hasn't completed.
This reduces the connection struct size by 22% on a 64bit arch!
The SOCKS buffer needs to be at least 600 bytes, and the download buffer
is guaranteed to never be smaller than 1000 bytes.
Closes#6491
By making the `magic` identifier the same size and at the same place
within the structs (easy, multi, share), libcurl will be able to more
reliably detect and safely error out if an application passes in the
wrong handle to APIs. Easier to detect and less likely to cause crashes
if done.
Such mixups can't be detected at compile-time due to them being
typedefed void pointers - unless `CURL_STRICTER` is defined.
Closes#6484
... in most cases instead of 'struct connectdata *' but in some cases in
addition to.
- We mostly operate on transfers and not connections.
- We need the transfer handle to log, store data and more. Everything in
libcurl is driven by a transfer (the CURL * in the public API).
- This work clarifies and separates the transfers from the connections
better.
- We should avoid "conn->data". Since individual connections can be used
by many transfers when multiplexing, making sure that conn->data
points to the current and correct transfer at all times is difficult
and has been notoriously error-prone over the years. The goal is to
ultimately remove the conn->data pointer for this reason.
Closes#6425
It is a security process for HTTP.
It doesn't seems to be standard, but it is used by some cloud providers.
Aws:
https://docs.aws.amazon.com/general/latest/gr/signature-version-4.html
Outscale:
https://wiki.outscale.net/display/EN/Creating+a+Canonical+Request
GCP (I didn't test that this code work with GCP though):
https://cloud.google.com/storage/docs/access-control/signing-urls-manually
most of the code is in lib/http_v4_signature.c
Information require by the algorithm:
- The URL
- Current time
- some prefix that are append to some of the signature parameters.
The data extracted from the URL are: the URI, the region,
the host and the API type
example:
https://api.eu-west-2.outscale.com/api/latest/ReadNets
~~~ ~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
^ ^ ^
/ \ URI
API type region
Small description of the algorithm:
- make canonical header using content type, the host, and the date
- hash the post data
- make canonical_request using custom request, the URI,
the get data, the canonical header, the signed header
and post data hash
- hash canonical_request
- make str_to_sign using one of the prefix pass in parameter,
the date, the credential scope and the canonical_request hash
- compute hmac from date, using secret key as key.
- compute hmac from region, using above hmac as key
- compute hmac from api_type, using above hmac as key
- compute hmac from request_type, using above hmac as key
- compute hmac from str_to_sign using above hmac as key
- create Authorization header using above hmac, prefix pass in parameter,
the date, and above hash
Signed-off-by: Matthias Gatto <matthias.gatto@outscale.com>
Closes#5703
When the initial request isn't possible to send in its entirety, the
remainder of request would be delivered to the debug callback as data
and would wrongly be counted internally as body-bytes sent.
Extended test 1295 to verify.
Closes#6328
To reduce use of types that can't be checked at compile time. Also
removes several typecasts.
... and rename the struct field from 'os_specific' to 'tdata'.
Closes#6239
Reviewed-by: Jay Satiro
- enable in the build (configure)
- header parsing
- host name lookup
- unit tests for the above
- CI build
- CURL_VERSION_HSTS bit
- curl_version_info support
- curl -V output
- curl-config --features
- CURLOPT_HSTS_CTRL
- man page for CURLOPT_HSTS_CTRL
- curl --hsts (sets CURLOPT_HSTS_CTRL and works with --libcurl)
- man page for --hsts
- save cache to disk
- load cache from disk
- CURLOPT_HSTS
- man page for CURLOPT_HSTS
- added docs/HSTS.md
- fixed --version docs
- adjusted curl_easy_duphandle
Closes#5896
When using HTTPS proxy, SSL is used but not in the view of the FTP
protocol handler itself so separate the connection's use of SSL from the
FTP control connection's sue.
Reported-by: Mingtao Yang
Fixes#5523Closes#6006
Failures clearly returned from a (SOCKS) proxy now causes this return
code. Previously the situation was not very clear as what would be
returned and when.
In addition: when this error code is returned, an application can use
CURLINFO_PROXY_ERROR to query libcurl for the detailed error, which then
returns a value from the new 'CURLproxycode' enum.
Closes#5770
This flag was applied to the connection struct that is released on
retry. These changes move the retry counter into Curl_easy struct that
lives across retries and retains the new connection.
Reported-by: Cherish98 on github
Fixes#5794Closes#5800
Provide the HTTP method that was used on the latest request, which might
be relevant for users when there was one or more redirects involved.
Closes#5511
Updated terminology in docs, comments and phrases to refer to C strings
as "null-terminated". Done to unify with how most other C oriented docs
refer of them and what users in general seem to prefer (based on a
single highly unscientific poll on twitter).
Reported-by: coinhubs on github
Fixes#5598Closes#5608
For QUIC but also for regular TCP when the second family runs out of IPs
with a failure while the first family is still trying to connect.
Separated the timeout handling for IPv4 and IPv6 connections when they
both have a number of addresses to iterate over.
Since the connection can be used by many independent requests (using
HTTP/2 or HTTP/3), things like user-agent and other transfer-specific
data MUST NOT be kept connection oriented as it could lead to requests
getting the wrong string for their requests. This struct data was
lingering like this due to old HTTP1 legacy thinking where it didn't
mattered..
Fixes#5566Closes#5567
When the method is updated inside libcurl we must still not change the
method as set by the user as then repeated transfers with that same
handle might not execute the same operation anymore!
This fixes the libcurl part of #5462
Test 1633 added to verify.
Closes#5499
... and free it as soon as the transfer is done. It removes the extra
alloc when a new size is set with setopt() and reduces memory for unused
easy handles.
In addition: the closure_handle now doesn't use an allocated buffer at
all but the smallest supported size as a stack based one.
Closes#5472
When USE_RESOLVE_ON_IPS is set (defined on macOS), it means that
numerical IP addresses still need to get "resolved" - but not with DoH.
Reported-by: Viktor Szakats
Fixes#5454Closes#5459
They're only limited to the maximum string input restrictions, not to
256 bytes.
Added test 1178 to verify
Reported-by: Will Roberts
Fixes#5448Closes#5449
This change introduces a generic way to provide binary data in setopt
options, called BLOBs.
This change introduces these new setopts:
CURLOPT_ISSUERCERT_BLOB, CURLOPT_PROXY_SSLCERT_BLOB,
CURLOPT_PROXY_SSLKEY_BLOB, CURLOPT_SSLCERT_BLOB and CURLOPT_SSLKEY_BLOB.
Reviewed-by: Daniel Stenberg
Closes#5357
- Stick to a single unified way to use structs
- Make checksrc complain on 'typedef struct {'
- Allow them in tests, public headers and examples
- Let MD4_CTX, MD5_CTX, and SHA256_CTX typedefs remain as they actually
typedef different types/structs depending on build conditions.
Closes#5338
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