Unicode Windows builds use UTF-8 strings internally in libcurl,
so make sure to call the UTF-8 flavour of the libidn2 API. Also
document that Windows builds with libidn2 and UNICODE do expect
CURLOPT_URL as an UTF-8 string.
Reported-by: dEajL3kA on github
Assisted-by: Jay Satiro
Reviewed-by: Marcel Raad
Closes#7246Fixes#7228
Since HTTPS is "the new normal", this update changes a lot of man page
examples to use https://example.com instead of the previous "http://..."
Closes#5969
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
... and add "MAILINDEX".
As described in #2789, this is a suggested solution. Changing UID=xx to
actually get mail with UID xx and add "MAILINDEX" to get a mail with a
special index in the mail box (old behavior). So MAILINDEX=1 gives the
first non deleted mail in the mail box.
Fixes#2789Closes#2815
The statement, “The application does not have to keep the string around
after setting this option,” appears to be indented under the RTMP
paragraph. It actually applies to all protocols, not just RTMP.
Eliminate the extra indentation.
Closes#2788
- Add new option CURLOPT_DEFAULT_PROTOCOL to allow specifying a default
protocol for schemeless URLs.
- Add new tool option --proto-default to expose
CURLOPT_DEFAULT_PROTOCOL.
In the case of schemeless URLs libcurl will behave in this way:
When the option is used libcurl will use the supplied default.
When the option is not used, libcurl will follow its usual plan of
guessing from the hostname and falling back to 'http'.