Added !SSPI to the features list of the HTTP digest tests, as SSPI
based builds now use the Windows SSPI messaging API rather than the
internal functions, and we can't control the random numbers that get
used as part of the digest.
Consistently use CRLF instead. The mixed endings weren't
documented so I assume they were unintentional.
This change doesn't matter for curl itself but makes using
the tests with a proxy between curl and the test server
more convenient.
Tests that consistently use no carriage returns were
left unmodified as one can easily work around this.
are not, due mainly to the lack of support for XML character entities
(e.g. & => & ). This will make it easier to validate test files using
tools like xmllint, as well as edit and view them using XML tools.
responded with a single status line and no headers nor body. Starting now, a
HTTP response on a persistent connection (i.e not set to be closed after the
response has been taken care of) must have Content-Length or chunked
encoding set, or libcurl will simply assume that there is no body.
To my horror I learned that we had no less than 57(!) test cases that did bad
HTTP responses like this, and even the test http server (sws) responded badly
when queried by the test system if it is the test system. So although the
actual fix for the problem was tiny, going through all the newly failing test
cases got really painful and boring.
(wrongly) sends *two* WWW-Authenticate headers for Digest. While this should
never happen in a sane world, libcurl previously got into an infinite loop
when this occurred. Dave added test 273 to verify this.