... so that the subsequent logic below can use a single known define to know
when built on Windows (as we don't define WIN32 anymore).
Follow-up to 1adebe7886
Reported-by: crazydef on github
Assisted-by: Marcel Raad
Fixes#4854Closes#4855
- Removed from global_init since it isn't thread-safe. The symbol will
still remain to not break compiles, it just won't have any effect going
forward.
- make the internals NOT loop on EINTR (the opposite from previously).
It only risks returning from the select/poll/wait functions early, and that
should be risk-free.
Closes#4840
- Copy CURLOPT_SSL_OPTIONS.3 description to CURLOPT_PROXY_SSL_OPTIONS.3.
Prior to this change CURLSSLOPT_NO_PARTIALCHAIN was missing from the
CURLOPT_PROXY_SSL_OPTIONS description.
As detailed in DEPRECATE.md, the polarssl support is now removed after
having been disabled for 6 months and nobody has missed it.
The threadlock files used by mbedtls are renamed to an 'mbedtls' prefix
instead of the former 'polarssl' and the common functions that
previously were shared between mbedtls and polarssl and contained the
name 'polarssl' have now all been renamed to instead say 'mbedtls'.
Closes#4825
... and refer to that file from from CURLOPT_COOKIEFILE.3 and
CURLOPT_COOKIELIST.3
Assisted-by: Jay Satiro
Reported-by: bsammon on github
Fixes#4805Closes#4806
- Add new error code CURLE_QUIC_CONNECT_ERROR for QUIC connection
errors.
Prior to this change CURLE_FAILED_INIT was used, but that was not
correct.
Closes https://github.com/curl/curl/pull/4754
For compatibility with `fwrite`, the `CURLOPT_HEADERFUNCTION` callback
is passed two `size_t` parameters which, when multiplied, designate the
number of bytes of data passed in. In practice, CURL always sets the
first parameter (`size`) to 1.
This practice is also enshrined in documentation and cannot be changed
in future. The documentation states that the default callback is
`fwrite`, which means `fwrite` must be a suitable function for this
purpose. However, the documentation also states that the callback must
return the number of *bytes* it successfully handled, whereas ISO C
`fwrite` returns the number of items (each of size `size`) which it
wrote. The only way these numbers can be equal is if `size` is 1.
Since `size` is 1 and can never be changed in future anyway, document
that fact explicitly and let users rely on it.
Reported-by: Frank Gevaerts
Commit-message-by: Christopher Head
Ref: https://github.com/curl/curl/pull/2787
Fixes https://github.com/curl/curl/issues/4758
The comment was confusing and suggested that setting CURLOPT_NOPROGRESS
to 0L would both enable and disable debug output at the same time, like
a Schrödinger's cat of CURLOPTs.
Closes#4745